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Welcome to the AIC Annual Meeting Program! Browse our draft schedule for the 2025 meeting in Minneapolis!

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Please note that ticketed events like workshops, luncheons, tours, and receptions are add-ons for meeting attendees. The prices listed are in addition to the meeting registration fees.

Banner photo by Lane Pelovsky, Courtesy of Meet Minneapolis
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Thursday, May 29
 

8:00am CDT

(Opening) Welcome and Opening Remarks
Thursday May 29, 2025 8:00am - 8:25am CDT
Thursday May 29, 2025 8:00am - 8:25am CDT
Hyatt Regency Minneapolis

8:30am CDT

(Opening) In Commitment to Community: BACC’s Journey into Radical Inclusion
Thursday May 29, 2025 8:30am - 8:47am CDT
What is a nonprofit regional center? This question often arises among conservation and preservation professionals. The staff at the Balboa Art Conservation Center (BACC) have spent the past four years answering it for themselves. Founded in 1975 by George Stout and Richard Buck, BACC was established to serve the collections and conservation needs of a select group of San Diego institutions. Over the decades, BACC adapted its identity and role in response to economic shifts, technological advances, fluctuating preservation interest, and social changes. Historically, BACC met its nonprofit duty by offering training fellowships and operating on a fee-for-service basis, which limited access to those who could afford it. This business model was over-reliant on earned revenue, and rendered the organization incapable of serving anyone who was unable to pay. BACC struggled to exist as a high capacity but exclusive and inaccessible organization for decades.

The retirement of a long-standing executive director at the end of 2019, along with the search for a new one in early 2020, combined with the COVID-19 pandemic and national protests following George Floyd’s murder, sparked significant institutional changes. Without an executive director, BACC staff stepped up into leadership roles. Staff envisioned a transformative era for BACC, aiming to make it relevant and responsive to the local community. They launched programs like Preserve Community Art, which focused on preserving protest art and its stories. The success of these programs confirmed the new direction for BACC. Collaborating with the board, they sought a new director who understood nonprofit work and could build community connections. They found the right person. BACC has spent the last four years making up for 46 years of exclusivity, opening its doors to all and inviting in those who were intentionally left out. Being in conversation with community partners has reshaped BACC’s mission, work, and the way the organization operates

BACC understands and acknowledges its historical role in perpetuating structural inequities and prioritizes access and equity to foster diversity and inclusion within the conservation field and broader arts community. The Center continues to provide conservation treatments while rethinking how regional conservation centers interact with collections and communities. The new vision includes inclusive conservation programs that extend access to underserved communities, support education and training, and partner with caretakers of community-based cultural collections. Additionally, BACC aims to expand knowledge in culturally conscious conservation methods by collaborating with creators and custodians of diverse cultural and ancestral collections.

This radical shift repositions BACC’s relationship with collections and communities, moving away from saviorism and charity-based service towards collective responsibility for the preservation of cultural heritage. This transformation has brought up questions about the role of regional centers and provoked varied responses from the field and funders. Some offer enthusiastic support, while others defend traditional approaches. Despite these reactions, BACC remains committed to its mission, adapting to the evolving needs of the cultural ecosystem. The Center’s renewed mission is clear: The Balboa Art Conservation Center advances the study and preservation of cultural heritage for all communities.
Speakers
avatar for Leticia Gomez Franco

Leticia Gomez Franco

Executive Director, Balboa Art Conservation Center
Leticia Gomez Franco (she/her/hers) is the Executive Director of the Balboa Art Conservation Center in San Diego, CA. Her work is rooted in the intersection of culture, representation and social justice, all values that play a role in her position at BACC where she is leading the... Read More →
avatar for Bianca Garcia

Bianca Garcia

Associate Conservator of Paintings / Programs Manager, Balboa Art Conservation Center
Bianca Garcia (she/her/ella) is an Associate Conservator of Paintings and Programs Manager at the BACC. She holds an M.Sc. Art Conservation with a focus on Paintings Conservation from the Winterthur/University of Delaware Program in Art Conservation (2016) and a B.A. in Art Conservation... Read More →
Authors
avatar for Leticia Gomez Franco

Leticia Gomez Franco

Executive Director, Balboa Art Conservation Center
Leticia Gomez Franco (she/her/hers) is the Executive Director of the Balboa Art Conservation Center in San Diego, CA. Her work is rooted in the intersection of culture, representation and social justice, all values that play a role in her position at BACC where she is leading the... Read More →
avatar for Bianca Garcia

Bianca Garcia

Associate Conservator of Paintings / Programs Manager, Balboa Art Conservation Center
Bianca Garcia (she/her/ella) is an Associate Conservator of Paintings and Programs Manager at the BACC. She holds an M.Sc. Art Conservation with a focus on Paintings Conservation from the Winterthur/University of Delaware Program in Art Conservation (2016) and a B.A. in Art Conservation... Read More →
avatar for Morgan Wylder

Morgan Wylder

Associate Conservator of Paintings, Balboa Art Conservation Center
Morgan (she/her/hers) is an Associate Conservator of Paintings at BACC, formerly an Assistant Conservator of Paintings and a Mellon Fellow in Paintings Conservation. Morgan earned a dual undergraduate degree in Fine Art and Art History at Cornell University. After university, she... Read More →
Thursday May 29, 2025 8:30am - 8:47am CDT
Hyatt Regency Minneapolis

8:47am CDT

(Opening) Considering Elements of Effective Collaboration at the National Museum of the American Indian
Thursday May 29, 2025 8:47am - 9:04am CDT
The vision and mission of the National Museum of the American Indian (NMAI) includes collaboration and partnership to realize equity, empowerment and social justice for Native peoples across the Western Hemisphere. Since the founding of the NMAI, the conservation team has worked with artists and communities to care for cultural heritage. Through decades of building and maintaining these relationships, we have witnessed the benefits to our constituency, the collection items, and our staff. Our ability to be effective collaborators is ever evolving. We’ve learned how collaboration is a relational practice encompassing critical elements, such as building trust, recognizing truth, providing access, acknowledging power dynamics, following through, and ultimately preserving what is valued. These elements of effective collaboration are even more important today considering the Smithsonian Institution’s recently adopted Shared Stewardship and Ethical Returns Policy. The policy formalizes relationships between institutions and their constituencies; therefore, the success of its implementation hinges on the strength of these partnerships.   

In order to achieve partnership equity, it is vital to operate in service to the collective goal, prioritizing the group’s objectives over individual agendas. Trust serves as the foundation for any collaborative endeavor and is built on consistent and transparent communication, reliability, and mutual respect. Humility, equitable power dynamic among all stakeholders, as well as truth recognition and an understanding of historical facts and present realities are essential. Power dynamics play a significant role in collaboration; balancing power among stakeholders ensures equitable participation. Access to relevant resources and open information sharing ensures well-informed decision making. Commitment follow-through and continuity are critical to maintaining trust, demonstrating reliability and sustainably supporting long-term impact. Preserving what is valued identifies and safeguards core principles, traditions, and goals essential to the collective identity and purpose of the collaboration. 

 This presentation will include an overview of the elements of collaboration as they have developed through decades of long-term partnerships between the NMAI and indigenous partners and colleagues, building relationship along the way. This presentation will also discuss how effective collaboration continues to be shaped by the Shared Stewardship and Ethical Return policy as implemented by the NMAI and sister museums in the Smithsonian family. This presentation establishes a base for the concurrent general session submission: “NMAI Collaborative Relationships: A Focused and Critical Look” which evaluates specific examples of collaborative partnerships with various communities and colleagues across the Western hemisphere.
Speakers
avatar for Kelly McHugh

Kelly McHugh

Supervisory Collections Manager, National Museum of the American Indian
Kelly McHugh is the Head of Conservation at the National Museum of the American Indian. She began working for the museum in 1996 at NMAI’s Research Branch facility in NY. Kelly focuses her work on the development of collaborative conservation practices for the care of Native American... Read More →
Authors
avatar for Kelly McHugh

Kelly McHugh

Supervisory Collections Manager, National Museum of the American Indian
Kelly McHugh is the Head of Conservation at the National Museum of the American Indian. She began working for the museum in 1996 at NMAI’s Research Branch facility in NY. Kelly focuses her work on the development of collaborative conservation practices for the care of Native American... Read More →
Thursday May 29, 2025 8:47am - 9:04am CDT
Hyatt Regency Minneapolis

9:04am CDT

(Opening) Powerful Places: cultivating cultural resilience in Minnesota’s sacred ecological sites
Thursday May 29, 2025 9:04am - 9:21am CDT
**Note: This abstract is prepared on behalf of the AIC Sustainability Committee in partnership with local non-profit organizations listed in the abstract.**

Natural landscapes and their non-human components are as much a part of cultural heritage as man-made materials and their intangible elements. By acknowledging the fragility of these environments, cultural heritage conservators can better engage with the natural ecological connections that are intertwined with the source of heritage and belongings made by communities local to these cultural landscapes. The concept of our project is part of a larger initiative to highlight local and significant ecological resilience concerns, and discuss their relation to cultural heritage and broader regional adaptation strategies.

For this annual meeting, we propose a talk on environmental stewardship of regional sites that are sacred to the Dakota People and other local communities, and are at-risk to climate change. Ȟaȟa Wakpá (the Mississippi River) is the second longest river in North America and represents cultural significance as a vital waterway for sustenance and transportation. The river is considered a sacred and powerful entity to many Indigenous peoples living along the Mississippi and its tributaries. For the third year in a row, extreme drought conditions in the Midwest are drawing down the river’s water levels, with widely varying precipitation patterns and flooding throughout the year attributed to impacts of climate change. Two non-profits local to the Twin Cities are addressing the environmental and cultural needs for sacred sites connected to the river. Wakan Tipi Awanyankapi, a Native-Led, East Side environmental stewardship nonprofit located in St. Paul, MN, focuses on the Lower Phelan Creek, its caves and burial sites. Based in downtown Minneapolis, Owámniyomni Okhódayapi advocates for the transformation of Owámniyomni (St. Anthony Falls), where Dakota peoples traditionally gathered for ceremonies, trade, and offerings, into a place of community healing “where Dakota history, language, and culture are visible and celebrated”. As Owámniyomni is in close proximity to the conference venue, a pre-conference tour with the non-profit is under consideration by AIC leadership.

These two organizations, both centered in Dakota values, strive to preserve their sacred connections with the land and form bonds of kinship for healing within their communities. The AIC Sustainability Committee proposes to collaborate on a talk with a representative from one or both of these organizations to promote the cultural heritage significance these sites have for Mní Sóta (Minnesota) communities and collaborative efforts to restore them. We will highlight regional perspectives and draw connections with ecological and cultural conservation communities, which have critical overlaps.
Speakers
avatar for Justine Wuebold

Justine Wuebold

Program Manager / Research Facilitator, NEH Grant Projects, UCLA
Justine Wuebold has worked more than a decade in museums and cultural heritage, and has specialized knowledge in collections care, conservation, and green museum practices. She holds a BA in Art History from San Francisco State University and earned a dual Masters in Museum Studies... Read More →
Authors
avatar for Justine Wuebold

Justine Wuebold

Program Manager / Research Facilitator, NEH Grant Projects, UCLA
Justine Wuebold has worked more than a decade in museums and cultural heritage, and has specialized knowledge in collections care, conservation, and green museum practices. She holds a BA in Art History from San Francisco State University and earned a dual Masters in Museum Studies... Read More →
Thursday May 29, 2025 9:04am - 9:21am CDT
Hyatt Regency Minneapolis

9:21am CDT

(Opening) Curiosa Naturalia: bringing a natural history collection back to life
Thursday May 29, 2025 9:21am - 9:38am CDT
In 2019, curiosity, exploration, and a love for collections drove Martín Batallés and Erika del Pino to collaborate with the Dr. Carlos Torres de la Llosa Natural History Museum and the Secondary Education Central Library in Montevideo, Uruguay. This collaboration began as a way to imagine bridges between conservation, art, and biology, to reflect on the role of fiction in natural science exhibits, and to start asking questions about what are considered materials worth discarding in natural history collections.

Curiosa Naturalia is a visual arts and museological project that involves research, salvage, and conservation of specimens and objects that had been unmanaged in storage spaces. Taxidermy mounts, posters with illustrations, books, fossils, bones, and didactic models of animals and plants were reconditioned to create a series of small installations inside the museum galleries, in an "exhibit within the exhibit" fashion.

The beginning stages of the project were focused on building relationships with museum and library staff to generate trust and excitement about bringing collections back to life after years of neglect. An important aspect of this stage was the learning from those who had worked at the museum for years, who had institutional memory and understanding of the history of decision making and prioritization in the collection. Following that, consultations with experts in topics such as conservation, history of science, and history of natural science exhibits in Montevideo made it possible to begin to properly care for these objects and to give them a new life in a different context.

Conservation work consisted mainly in cleaning the objects and specimens. Some specimens had been so seriously neglected that they could not be recovered. These became ideal specimens to be intervened more invasively, allowing them to continue to serve their exhibit purpose but with a new identity. Conversations with museum authorities allowed for the modification of the intent of the specimens from scientific display to an artistic and evocative one.

The last stage of the project involved mounting several small exhibitions, one within each gallery of the museum and in one room of the adjoining library. On opening day, there was a tour of the space done by an actress that brought the audience into the world of curiosity and nature. After that, the installations were on display for two months, during which we continued to work with museum staff, who by then had become highly engaged with our work and whose enthusiasm for the care of the collections continued to grow. 

Curiosa Naturalia began as a project to recontextualize natural history specimens within the realm of art. Nowadays it has morphed into a collaboration with museum staff to care for collections and to tell the story of their own museum. Since then, other instances of exhibition, talks, and collaboration have stemmed from this initial phase. We like to think this project is far from finished and that the collaborations and relationships we fostered will continue to reshape Curiosa Naturalia through years to come.
Speakers
avatar for Mariana Di Giacomo

Mariana Di Giacomo

Natural History Conservator, Yale Peabody Museum
Mariana Di Giacomo is the Natural History Conservator at the Yale Peabody Museum and recently finished her three-year tenure as Chair of the Conservation at Yale Steering Committee, where she still serves. Prior to coming to Yale, she spent three years as a Conservation Fellow at... Read More →
Authors
avatar for Mariana Di Giacomo

Mariana Di Giacomo

Natural History Conservator, Yale Peabody Museum
Mariana Di Giacomo is the Natural History Conservator at the Yale Peabody Museum and recently finished her three-year tenure as Chair of the Conservation at Yale Steering Committee, where she still serves. Prior to coming to Yale, she spent three years as a Conservation Fellow at... Read More →
MB

Martín Batallés

Collection Staff / Photographer / Designer, Departamento de Paleontología, Facultad de Ciencias, Universidad de la República
PS

Paula Sánchez

Museo de Historia Natural Dr. Carlos Torres de la Llosa
Thursday May 29, 2025 9:21am - 9:38am CDT
Hyatt Regency Minneapolis

9:38am CDT

(Opening) Threads of Time: Discovering a 19th-Century Faroese Knitted Sweater
Thursday May 29, 2025 9:38am - 9:55am CDT
The Prize Papers Project focuses on studying and digitizing the Prize Papers, a unique archive documenting global daily life during European colonial expansion. The project is a collaboration between The National Archives, UK (TNA) and the University of Oldenburg, Germany. Among these documents was found a collection of unopened packages from the Faroe Islands dating from 1807. A major scheme was developed uniting researchers, conservators, scientists, and professionals from around the globe to safely assess, record, image, open, and analyse this collection. The project was led by TNA’s conservation and research teams in close partnership with The Faroe Islands National Museum and University of Oldenburg. 

Prize-taking resulted in an extensive archive, including documents from over 35,000 captured ships. Among these ships was the Anna Marie, a Danish merchant vessel from Tórshavn to Copenhagen, seized on September 1807. The Anna Marie, one of two ships owned by the Danish king, carried mail representing about a quarter of the communication between the Faroes and Denmark that year. Among the various letters, five unopened parcels containing knitted goods and grains were found. The most remarkable was a hand-knitted red woollen sweater with a navy and white pattern, the only known example and precisely dated knitted sweater from the Faroe Islands for this period. This discovery is of major significance for Faroese society as the sweater was accompanied by a letter detailing its origin, sender, recipient, and context. Few collections offer such rich insights into early 19th-century Faroese everyday life. 

Opening these culturally significant items involved many people and irreversible decisions. Lead by the conservation team, there was a consensus to open the parcels due to their potential significance, whilst leaving one package sealed for future reference and analysis. The parcels were photographed, filmed, and photogrammetry images were taken aiming to capture every detail that would be lost once opened. The unwrapping and content reveal were then conducted in the presence of the Faroese and Oldenburg teams, researchers, and media, marking a historic moment, and providing the Faroese with the unique opportunity to uncover this new sweater design. 

The significance of this discovery was greatly enhanced by the collaboration with the Faroe Islands team. Their immediate recognition of the unique pattern and expertise in reading the letters underscored the importance of this partnership. 

The items were rehoused with each object, wrapper, cord, and letter grouped to maintain their materiality. The wool and grains are undergoing extensive analyses. Colourants have been identified, and DNA profiling, using reference materials from colleagues around the world, is being performed to determine the origin of wool. The results, expected by May 2025, will provide insights into wool trade and resources in 19th-century Faroese society. 

The value of this collection lies in its completeness, never has a knitted pattern from the Faroe Islands been dated so precisely and found in such pristine condition. The rarity of these objects and the opportunity to collaborate with a diverse spectrum of partners is what makes this project so unique in its perspective.
Speakers
avatar for Marina Casagrande

Marina Casagrande

Prize Papers Project Conservator, The National Archives
Marina Casagrande has held the position of Prize Papers Project Conservator within the Collection Care department at the National Archives of the United Kingdom since September 2023.Marina graduated in 2018 with a Bachelor (Hons) in Fashion Design at the Santa Catarina State University... Read More →
avatar for Sarah Noble

Sarah Noble

Senior Conservation Manager, The National Archives
Sarah Noble is The Head of Conservation for Imaging within the Collection Care department at The National Archives, UK, specialising in the planning and management of their large-scale digitisation programme.Sarah has a BA in Photography, Video and Digital Imaging from The University... Read More →
Authors
avatar for Marina Casagrande

Marina Casagrande

Prize Papers Project Conservator, The National Archives
Marina Casagrande has held the position of Prize Papers Project Conservator within the Collection Care department at the National Archives of the United Kingdom since September 2023.Marina graduated in 2018 with a Bachelor (Hons) in Fashion Design at the Santa Catarina State University... Read More →
avatar for Sarah Noble

Sarah Noble

Senior Conservation Manager, The National Archives
Sarah Noble is The Head of Conservation for Imaging within the Collection Care department at The National Archives, UK, specialising in the planning and management of their large-scale digitisation programme.Sarah has a BA in Photography, Video and Digital Imaging from The University... Read More →
avatar for Marc Vermeulen

Marc Vermeulen

Head of Heritage Science and Conservation Research, The National Archives
Thursday May 29, 2025 9:38am - 9:55am CDT
Hyatt Regency Minneapolis

9:55am CDT

(Opening) “It feels like Chief Dúqvay̓ḷa, Captain Carpenter, has come home”– Collaborative storytelling of his Chief’s Seat repatriation to the Carpenter Family in the Haíłzaqv Nation after 113 years
Thursday May 29, 2025 9:55am - 10:15am CDT
Repatriation is an important aspect of cultural restitution for Indigenous peoples and centers on the building and maintaining of relationships between communities and institutions. Each repatriation has a unique story to share with far-reaching impacts that span communities and generations. By exploring these stories, we learn how repatriation brings diverse people together to share knowledge and experiences, enriching our lives and work. Together with colleagues and potlatchers from the Haíłzaqv Nation, we share our story of returning the Captain Carpenter Chief’s Seat to its rightful home in Bella Bella, British Columbia, Canada. The name of the nation, Haíłzaqv, means “to speak and act correctly,” and this has been at the core of storytelling of the Chief’s Seat. This journey took many years and a diverse range of people including the Haíłzaqv knowledge holders and cross-departmental staff at Royal British Columbia Museum (RBCM). After Charles Newcombe purchased the Seat in 1911, it was disassembled into four panels by an unidentified conservator at RBCM in 1976. Aside from one occasion where it was briefly assembled by museum staff for exhibit, the Seat would have remained disassembled and disconnected from its family in the silent storage of RBCM for over 113 years. The family could only access the Chief’s Seat through published photographs. Led by the Heiltsuk Integrated Resource Management Department (HIRMD) and in collaboration with RBCM staff, this Haíłzaqv treasure traveled home to Bella Bella, was reassembled by Jack Wilson, the great-great grandson of Chief Captain Carpenter (Dúqvay̓ḷá), with the help of Ian Reid and Max Johnson Sr., and reactivated at the Family Feast on July 25, 2024. This story of the Seat’s journey home demonstrates how Indigenous-led approaches to conservation and repatriation encourage us to reflect on our museum practices and develop hands-on, critical approaches towards building meaningful relationships in the space of Indigenized allyship. The repatriation of the Seat incorporated knowledge-sharing through two ceremonies: Repatriation Blessing Ceremony at Wawadit'ła in Victoria and the Family Feast at Gvúkva’aus in Bella Bella. Members from the Haíłzaqv Nation and the Indigenous Collections and Repatriation (ICAR) and Conservation Departments from RBCM were invited to witness the active, multisensory storytelling of the Seat through acts of participation, songs, dances and gift-giving at these ceremonies. Ceremonies of Náwálakv (supernatural power) were reintroduced back to the Chief’s Seat. Through this journey, we worked together with grace and respect and, above all, care for one another as living beings. With the Seat being back in the care of the family and community, its story will continue to evolve dynamically in the way it was intended to be used in potlatches. In providing this story, we hope to share acts of care taken/provided and lessons learnt in the repatriation of the Carpenter Chief’s Seat to open spaces for collaborative storytelling. As Ian Reid spoke, “[t]his [Chief’s Seat] contains all of the universe, and we must never forget that," and he was right. We were brought together in the network of stories around the Carpenter Chief’s Seat.
Speakers
avatar for Sally Gunhee Kim

Sally Gunhee Kim

Objects Conservator, Royal British Columbia Museum
Sally Gunhee Kim (she/her) is an Objects Conservator at the Royal British Columbia Museum, situated on the traditional territories of the lək̓ʷəŋən peoples (Songhees and Xwsepsum Nations). Previously, Sally worked as a postgraduate fellow in the Department of Objects Conservation... Read More →
EQ

Elroy Q̓i̓x̌itasu White

Repatriation Advisor, Heiltsuk Integrated Resource Management Department, Heiltsuk Integrated Resource Management Department
Elroy White is a Heiltsuk Nation member, potlatcher, repatriation advisor and archaeologist (MA). Elroy specializes on the complex relationship between material culture, potlatch history and repatriation on behalf of his nation through his approach called “M̓ṇúxvit,” which... Read More →
IY

Ian Yáxuλas Q̓ámác̓las Reid

Carver, Potlatcher, Royal British Columbia Museum
Ian Reid was born and raised in Waglisla to a Kimsquit father and a Xaxais mother. From a very young age, Ian has been involved in cultural activities, singing potlatch songs his whole life under the teachings of his relatives. Some of his teachers were Late Chief David Gladstone... Read More →
Authors
avatar for Sally Gunhee Kim

Sally Gunhee Kim

Objects Conservator, Royal British Columbia Museum
Sally Gunhee Kim (she/her) is an Objects Conservator at the Royal British Columbia Museum, situated on the traditional territories of the lək̓ʷəŋən peoples (Songhees and Xwsepsum Nations). Previously, Sally worked as a postgraduate fellow in the Department of Objects Conservation... Read More →
EQ

Elroy Q̓i̓x̌itasu White

Repatriation Advisor, Heiltsuk Integrated Resource Management Department, Heiltsuk Integrated Resource Management Department
Elroy White is a Heiltsuk Nation member, potlatcher, repatriation advisor and archaeologist (MA). Elroy specializes on the complex relationship between material culture, potlatch history and repatriation on behalf of his nation through his approach called “M̓ṇúxvit,” which... Read More →
IY

Ian Yáxuλas Q̓ámác̓las Reid

Carver, Potlatcher, Royal British Columbia Museum
Ian Reid was born and raised in Waglisla to a Kimsquit father and a Xaxais mother. From a very young age, Ian has been involved in cultural activities, singing potlatch songs his whole life under the teachings of his relatives. Some of his teachers were Late Chief David Gladstone... Read More →
EP

Elizabeth Peterson

Director of the Indigenous Collections and Repatriation Department (ICAR), Royal British Columbia Museum
Dr. Elizabeth Peterson is the Director of the Indigenous Collections and Repatriation Department (ICAR) at the Royal British Columbia Museum (RBCM), located on the lands of the lək̓ʷəŋən peoples. Holding a PhD in Archaeology, Elizabeth has spent over 18 years working on community-led... Read More →
Thursday May 29, 2025 9:55am - 10:15am CDT
Hyatt Regency Minneapolis

10:15am CDT

Morning Exhibit Hall Break
Thursday May 29, 2025 10:15am - 10:55am CDT
Thursday May 29, 2025 10:15am - 10:55am CDT
Hyatt Regency Minneapolis

10:55am CDT

12:00pm CDT

Speed Mentoring
Thursday May 29, 2025 12:00pm - 2:00pm CDT
Sponsors
avatar for Contemporary Art Network (CAN!)

Contemporary Art Network (CAN!)

Formed in 2019, the purpose of the Contemporary Art Network (CAN!) is to: provide a forum for conservators of contemporary art and related professionals to exchange knowledge and ideas across material specializations; encourage recognition of contemporary art as a distinct practice... Read More →
avatar for INCCA

INCCA

INCCA members are dedicated to developing, sharing and preserving knowledge needed for the conservation of modern and contemporary art. INCCA is a network of like-minded professionals connected to the conservation of modern and contemporary art. Conservators, curators, scientists... Read More →
Thursday May 29, 2025 12:00pm - 2:00pm CDT

12:00pm CDT

(Luncheon) Forging Connections: Working Together to Build and Sustain Small-Team Preservation Programs in Libraries and Archives - Cost $35
Thursday May 29, 2025 12:00pm - 2:00pm CDT
  • $35 registration fee
  • Adding this event to your schedule does not guarantee you a space. You must add it to your registration via the above "Add to Registration" button.

Are you a conservator or preservation technician working alone or in a small team, managing all aspects of preservation and/or conservation for both special and circulating library and archival collections? Do you find yourself navigating these responsibilities with limited resources or support? Join us for a lunch session to address these unique challenges that so many in our field experience, explore practical solutions for building and sustaining robust preservation programs, and continue to build your network.

In June 2024 a group of five “Lone Conservators” working in university libraries began meeting informally on Zoom every two weeks after connecting at AIC’s Annual Conference in Salt Lake City. We come from different parts of the world and we share a common experience: each of us is tasked with handling multiple roles, as our institutions lack the budget for fully staffed Preservation/Conservation Departments. While some university libraries are creating preservation or collections care positions, these roles are often filled by just one conservator tasked with overseeing entire programs. As a result, what were once well-staffed preservation efforts are being reduced to smaller teams, leaving fewer people to manage large collections that continue to deteriorate. Over the months of meeting we are finding great support in one another by creating a cross-institutional department meeting, an active Discord channel, and a fileshare where we exchange helpful documentation and protocols. Our hope is to expand this network and connect with more conservators in similar roles, inviting them to join us and benefit from the support we’ve found in one another.

This session serves as an extension of themes we discuss in our bi-monthly meetings and focuses on:

  • Building Networks and Sharing Resources: Strategies for connecting with local and online cultural heritage communities and sharing best practices and resources.
  • Overcoming Institutional Challenges: Effective communication to advocate for preservation needs, change institutional culture around preservation, and manage with limited budgets and staff.
  • Making the most of Resources: Prioritizing tasks, finding cost-efficient preservation methods and materials, setting up functional labs, and developing tools for management and collaboration.
  • Documentation and Policies: Creating and maintaining comprehensive documentation and developing effective preservation policies.
  • Professional Development: Opportunities for training and career growth to enhance skills and advance in the field.

Our group has grown already and we aim to open up this bi-monthly virtual meeting place for anyone who would benefit from joining. We continue to develop ideas, come up with ways to advocate for one another within our institutions, and organize as a group. We're excited to share our progress and discuss your thoughts during this lunch session!

Our panel will feature four professionals – Amanda Richards (University of Tennessee), Carrie Smith (Tulane University), Fleur van der Woude (University of Arizona), and Nora Bloch (Virginia Commonwealth University) – who navigate these challenges and will share their insights and stories. Attendees will be encouraged to participate in the conversation, share their experiences, and collaborate on solutions. Together, we can inspire each other and strengthen the field of library and archive preservation and conservation.
Speakers
avatar for Carrie Smith

Carrie Smith

Conservation Librarian, Tulane University Libraries
Carrie Smith is the Conservation Librarian at Tulane University Libraries. She was most recently an Assistant Conservator at the Metropolitan Museum of Art. Prior to that, she held conservation positions at New York University, United States Holocaust Memorial Museum, National Postal... Read More →
avatar for Amanda Richards

Amanda Richards

Preservation Technician, University of Tennessee Library
avatar for Fleur van der Woude

Fleur van der Woude

Special Collections Preventive Conservator, University of Arizona Libraries
Fleur van der Woude works at University of Arizona Libraries Special Collections in Tucson, AZ. She manages the Preservation Studio, where a small team works on a broad range of activities to ensure preservation and accessibility of Special Collections and circulating collections... Read More →
avatar for Nora Bloch

Nora Bloch

Collections Care Librarian and Conservator, Virginia Commonwealth University)
Nora Bloch holds a Master’s of Library and Information Studies from the University of California--Los Angeles and a B.A. in Classical Studies from the University of California--Santa Cruz.  Additionally, she holds a MA in Book and Paper Conservation from West Dean College in England... Read More →
Thursday May 29, 2025 12:00pm - 2:00pm CDT
Hyatt Regency Minneapolis

12:00pm CDT

(Luncheon) Foundations of Spectral Imaging of Cultural Heritage Objects (Multiband, Multispectral and Hyperspectral Imaging) - Cost $35
Thursday May 29, 2025 12:00pm - 2:00pm CDT
  • $35 registration fee
  • Adding this event to your schedule does not guarantee you a space. You must add it to your registration via the above "Add to Registration" button.

The lunch session is designed to delve into the fundamental aspects of multiband (MBI), multispectral (MSI), and hyperspectral (HSI) imaging in a welcoming setting that invites learning, inquiry, and exchange. The first part of the session will include an invited presentation on light-matter interaction focusing on the phenomena that provides the foundation for MBI, MSI and HSI. The second part of the session shifts from phenomena to technique and will include two invited presenters to cover MBI and imaging spectroscopy (MSI and HSI). The presenters will define these techniques and their principles of operation, highlighting advantages and limitations of the techniques with case studies of applications and media. Presenters will also touch on instrumentation and requirements for setup, calibration, processing, and analysis. Other important topics include the knowledge required to acquire and interpret spectral data and variations in equipment setups and corresponding general price points. Each of the presentations will be followed by time for Q&A and a resource document will be assembled to share with participants. The session will be recorded as an intended resource for the community.

Presenters:
  • Kate Dooley, Imaging Scientist, National Gallery of Art: Light-Matter Interaction
  • Jiuan Jiuan Chen, Assoc. Professor, Buffalo State University: Multiband Imaging
  • Olivia Kuzio, Assistant Scientist, Getty Conservation Institute: Imaging Spectroscopy (Multispectral and Hyperspectral Imaging)
The session is continuing to be co-developed with the invited speakers and representatives from Imaging Working Group (IWG), Book and Paper Specialty Group (BPG), Photographic Materials Group (PMG), and Research and Technical Studies Specialty Group (RATS).

The lunch session fits into a larger imaging program at the Annual Meeting that will include a joint specialty session looking at case studies of applications and interpretation (BPG, PMG, RATS), and a concurrent general session (pulling together a range of media, techniques, and applications). The lunch will be held at the beginning of the conference to lay a foundation for the joint and concurrent general sessions.
Speakers
avatar for Olivia Kuzio

Olivia Kuzio

Assistant Scientist, Getty Conservation Institute
Olivia works in the GCI Science Department's Technical Studies Research laboratory, where her projects center around imaging systems. She focuses on expanding the Institute's capabilities in hyperspectral imaging and incorporating it with other scientific imaging techniques, such... Read More →
avatar for Kate Dooley

Kate Dooley

Imaging Scientist, National Gallery of Art
Kate Dooley is a Research Scientist in the Scientific Research Department at the National Gallery of Art and is interested in the spectroscopic identification and mapping of materials and chemical imaging methods. She graduated with her Ph.D. in Chemistry from the University of Michigan... Read More →
avatar for Jiuan Jiuan Chen

Jiuan Jiuan Chen

Assoc. Prof, Buffalo State University
Jiuan Jiuan Chen is the Associate Professor of Conservation Imaging, Technical Examination, and Documentation at the Patricia H. and Richard E. Garman Art Conservation Department at SUNY Buffalo State University. She received the Sheldon and Caroline Keck Award in 2023 in recognition... Read More →
Thursday May 29, 2025 12:00pm - 2:00pm CDT
Hyatt Regency Minneapolis

12:00pm CDT

(Luncheon) Our Stories: Communicating Conservation when Presenting to a General Audience - Cost $35
Thursday May 29, 2025 12:00pm - 2:00pm CDT
  • $35 registration fee
  • Adding this event to your schedule does not guarantee you a space. You must add it to your registration via the above "Add to Registration" button.

The work of art, architectural and archeological conservators is frequently covered in commercial media like The New Yorker, Atlantic, New York Times, LA Times, Washington Post, and Wall Street Journal. Yet only a handful of conservators have been actively writing our stories for general audiences. That is changing now, and this panel aims to show some of the strategies that some practitioners are using to communicate our ideas. The goal of such writing is to bring visibility to our profession and to ensure that what is told about us is accurate as well as interesting. In popular media we tend to be depicted as either basement-dwelling nitpickers or Indiana Jones style swashbucklers.  But the true elegance of our work, the mindset that goes into our commitments to doing no harm and protecting work for the future, as well as how our approach to repair can be a metaphor for other ways to live in the world, is rarely seen in writing about conservation done by others. This panel will show current writing by five practitioners who regularly promote conservation to general audiences. Each will read from something they have written and describe their goals and approach to writing. Then we will open it to the audience for conversation and discussion. The goal of the panel is to spur our community to more writing and more communication with the world at large.
Speakers
avatar for Rosa Lowinger

Rosa Lowinger

Founder/ Conservator, RLA Conservation
Rosa Lowinger is 1984 graduate of the Conservation Center at NYU’s Institute of Fine Arts and a Fellow of the American Institute for Conservation. She founded Los Angeles' Sculpture Conservation Studio and RLA Conservation of Art + Architecture an architecture and objects studio... Read More →
avatar for Jim Coddington

Jim Coddington

James L. Coddington served as The Agnes Gund Chief Conservator at The Museum of Modern Art from 2002 to 2016. Mr. Coddington joined the Museum as Associate Conservator in 1987, rising to become Senior Conservator, and then Chief Conservator in 1996.In 2013, Mr. Coddington completed... Read More →
Thursday May 29, 2025 12:00pm - 2:00pm CDT
Hyatt Regency Minneapolis

2:00pm CDT

(Architecture) Solution from Nature: Psyllium Husk as a Biological Amendment for Soil-based Shelter Coat Protection of Earthen Heritage
Thursday May 29, 2025 2:00pm - 2:30pm CDT
By drawing inspiration from the traditional practice of amending earthen plaster with natural organic additives, this study explores innovative possibilities of biological amendments inspired by other disciplines for the conservation of earthen built heritage. 

Psyllium husk, a plant-based polysaccharide, is traditionally harnessed for medicinal purposes and has recently gained attention in civil engineering and agronomy as a natural soil stabilizer. This research studies psyllium husk as a cross-disciplinary biological amendment for soil-based shelter coats on earthen structures. Through laboratory testing, we examined the physico-mechanical properties of soils amended with psyllium husk and evaluated its potential as a sustainable alternative to modern synthetic amendments.

Earthen heritage represents a global building tradition that has remained viable for millennia. Key advantages of earthen construction include local availability, low cost, and minimal environmental impact; however, earth is highly sensitive to climatic factors, especially moisture. The increasing intensity of rain events due to Climate Change threatens the stability of earthen heritage in traditionally arid regions. For over five decades, synthetic organic polymers have been used as amendment for the conservation of earthen materials. However, the effectiveness of such materials depends on soil composition and low moisture levels. With clean soil being a dwindling non-renewable resource, they also present issues such as incompatibility, irreversibility, and low sustainability. These limitations have prompted a search for alternative solutions that better address diminishing resources and a changing climate.

Biological materials, rooted in traditional building practices, offer promising alternatives. Historical examples, such as the use of animal blood and cactus pulp by indigenous and Hispano builders in earthen construction, demonstrate the potential of biological materials in enhancing soil stability. Modern lab-engineered materials like nanocellulose offer controlled quality and environmental benefits. Recently, fields like agronomy and civil engineering have developed commercial products that are readily available, cost-effective, and easy to use. Literature research identifies psyllium husk as a promising candidate.

Further evaluation focused on water erosion resistance and compatibility with raw-earth structures. Three stages of laboratory testing were conducted: soil characterization, shelter coat formulation, and performance testing of the amended soil. Testing procedures were designed based on various industry standards, while analytical techniques like X-ray diffraction and SEM-EDS provided deeper insights into the mechanisms of psyllium husk as an amendment and its effects on soil mineralogy and other critical properties.

Results show that psyllium husk performs comparably to synthetic amendments in enhancing the water erosion resistance of soil-based shelter coats. It also demonstrates improved compatibility and potentials of reusability. These findings suggest that psyllium husk could be a viable, sustainable alternative to synthetic materials in the conservation of earthen structures. The study also opens avenues for further research, including field testing, exploring diverse application methods, and investigating synergies with other amendment materials.

Beyond specific findings on psyllium husk, this research highlights the promising implication of applying biological material to conservation. By integrating materials and techniques from other fields, we can develop more feasible, sustainable, and adaptive strategies to address contemporary challenges such as Climate Change and diminishing resources.
Speakers
avatar for Jiwen Fan

Jiwen Fan

Research Associate, University of Pennsylvania
Jiwen Fan is a Research Associate at The Center for Architectural Conservation of Stuart Weitzman School of Design at the University of Pennsylvania. She holds a Master of Science in Historic Preservation with a concentration in architectural conservation from the University of Pennsylvania... Read More →
Authors
avatar for Jiwen Fan

Jiwen Fan

Research Associate, University of Pennsylvania
Jiwen Fan is a Research Associate at The Center for Architectural Conservation of Stuart Weitzman School of Design at the University of Pennsylvania. She holds a Master of Science in Historic Preservation with a concentration in architectural conservation from the University of Pennsylvania... Read More →
Thursday May 29, 2025 2:00pm - 2:30pm CDT
Hyatt Regency Minneapolis

2:00pm CDT

(Book and Paper) A Decade in America: A 10 year race to prepare the 1960s Census Enumeration District Maps for digitization
Thursday May 29, 2025 2:00pm - 2:30pm CDT
Census data is treasured by almost everyone, from genealogists and academics to state and federal agencies and ordinary Americans researching family histories. To meet this demand and fulfill its mission to provide public access to federal records, every decade the National Archives and Records Administration (NARA) releases the census data from 72 years prior.

Most recently, data from the 1950 census was released on April 1, 2022. Adding millions of census-related documents to the National Archives Catalog was an all-hands-on-deck event. Collaboration between units was essential to achieving this goal, with NARA staff working around the clock in shifts to meet the deadline. Immediately after the release of the 1950 census, NARA began preparing for the release of the 1960 census in 2032 with an expectation of even greater digital access. In July 2023, conservation was tasked with developing a project assessment and treatment plan for the 30,000 1960 census enumeration district maps, with the understanding that this project would encompass 10 years of work.




The magnitude of NARA’s collections means that the maps are not cataloged at the item level. Discussions with the archivists revealed that they believed the maps depicting densely populated urban areas were most damaged. This was confirmed by a preservation survey, which found that about 10% of the maps likely needed repair. We then undertook a pilot project to estimate the treatment time for each map and develop a monthly goal allowing us to treat a minimum of 3,000 maps by 2032.




Some of the tools that we have used to give this project a good start towards success are well-documented treatment guidelines, tracking numbers and hours, team check-in meetings, and quality control procedures. Close collaboration with archivists and specialists is essential to developing practical workflows that work for all departments involved.




The 1960 census enumeration district maps are inherently collaborative in nature. They were created by census takers in partnership with everyday Americans, arrived at NARA thanks to federal and state agencies working together, were processed by a team of archivists, and are now being prepared and digitized through the joint efforts of multiple units across the agency so that they can be accessed by researchers who will use their data in unique and creative ways to better our understanding of history. Our treatment approach is likewise collaborative, with conservation staff playing only a small role in the overall project. This non-hierarchical approach holds specific advantages in that it familiarizes us with specific treatment challenges and represents a methodology sympathetic to the ethos and nature of the census enumeration district maps themselves.
Speakers
avatar for Saira Haqqi

Saira Haqqi

Senior Conservator, National Archives and Records Administration
Saira Haqqi is a conservator at the National Archives and Records Administration in College Park, MD. Prior to this, she was the book and paper conservator at the Minnesota Historical Society. Saira received her B.A. in Liberal Arts from Carleton College, MN, and Master’s degrees... Read More →
Authors
avatar for Saira Haqqi

Saira Haqqi

Senior Conservator, National Archives and Records Administration
Saira Haqqi is a conservator at the National Archives and Records Administration in College Park, MD. Prior to this, she was the book and paper conservator at the Minnesota Historical Society. Saira received her B.A. in Liberal Arts from Carleton College, MN, and Master’s degrees... Read More →
avatar for Sonya Barron

Sonya Barron

Conservator, National Archives and Records Administration
Sonya Barron is a book and paper conservator at the National Archives and Records Administration. She has previously worked at the Huntington Library in San Marino, CA Iowa State University Library in Ames and at the United States Holocaust Memorial Museum in Washington DC. She started... Read More →
Thursday May 29, 2025 2:00pm - 2:30pm CDT
Hyatt Regency Minneapolis

2:00pm CDT

(Contemporary Art) Direct Approaches to Complex Situations: Collaborating to Display Contemporary Textiles at the Los Angeles County Museum of Art
Thursday May 29, 2025 2:00pm - 2:30pm CDT
Working with contemporary, mixed-media textiles presents unique display challenges. Artworks are frequently created from a wide range of materials and can be extremely heavy, voluminous, and sometimes, self-destructive. Meanwhile, an artist’s vision of how their work is perceived by the world may not entirely align with the stability of the piece itself. 

Artworks at the Los Angeles County Museum of Art include such pieces as Aunty Lovey se Kombuis, 2022 by Igshaan Adams. Created from wood, plastic, glass, bone and shell beads, fabric, cotton twine, silver linked chain, and plastic-coated wire, this massive piece was originally nailed to a wall by the artist at approximately one foot intervals, causing the piece to inherently distort along its upper border. Although the distortion was intentional, the stress along these points posed long-term risks to the plethora of materials used. This was taken into consideration during preparatory and installation phases as a variety of mounting approaches were tested - with the goal of reducing stress and strain, while preserving the artist’s vision. 

Working directly with an artist during an installation can also require swift adaptability. During the installation of We Live in Painting: The Nature of Color in Mesoamerican Art, Porfirio Gutierrez a Latin American artist and activist added yarn sculptures and nopales, prickly pear cactus segments (phylloclades) to his installation list. Before entering the galleries, cactus spines and any cochineal insects were first removed from the phylloclades, which were then strung on hemp and suspended from a prepared rack. Since the artist mentioned that metal accelerated degradation of the cactus segments causing them to rot, the hanging mechanism was inserted with sharpened pencils. 

Installing contemporary textiles often requires collaboration between conservators, collections management teams, preparators, and often, the artists themselves, resulting in exhibitions that aim to achieve the artist’s vision, while preserving the material integrity of the artworks and maintaining gallery spaces.
Speakers
avatar for Kristal Hale

Kristal Hale

Conservator, Textiles, Los Angeles County Museum of Art
Kristal Hale is Conservator of Textiles at the Conservation Center of Los Angeles County Museum of Art (LACMA). She holds an MA in art conservation with a textile specialization from the Bern University of Applied Sciences in collaboration with the Abegg-Stiftung, Switzerland. Kristal... Read More →
Authors
avatar for Kristal Hale

Kristal Hale

Conservator, Textiles, Los Angeles County Museum of Art
Kristal Hale is Conservator of Textiles at the Conservation Center of Los Angeles County Museum of Art (LACMA). She holds an MA in art conservation with a textile specialization from the Bern University of Applied Sciences in collaboration with the Abegg-Stiftung, Switzerland. Kristal... Read More →
Thursday May 29, 2025 2:00pm - 2:30pm CDT
Hyatt Regency Minneapolis

2:00pm CDT

(Electronic Media) I’m Gonna Be (5000 Carriers): Success Rates and Predictors in Digital Media Preservation
Thursday May 29, 2025 2:00pm - 2:30pm CDT
How successful are we really at accessing data from obsolete digital carriers? While methodologies abound, shared benchmarks for retrieval success rates remain elusive, and carrier lifespan estimates vary widely. In this session, I’ll present findings from an analysis of over 5,000 digital media carriers in my institution’s collections, using binary logistic regression to evaluate predictors of data retrieval success, including media age, format, and carrier source. A Chi-square Test of Independence also sheds light on the subtle relationship between success and carrier source (manuscript vs. published).
Key findings are that while manuscript media are slightly less likely to succeed than published materials, age and filesystem emerge as more influential predictors. Along the way, we encountered unexpected challenges—high success rates and data homogeneity limited the models, forcing us to rethink how we define "success" and assess risk. Join me to explore what these findings mean and discover how the gaps and uncertainties in our data might hold the key to better benchmarks.

Speakers
avatar for Jess Whyte

Jess Whyte

Digital Assets Librarian, University of Toronto
Jess Whyte is the Digital Assets Librarian at the University of Toronto, where she previously held the position of Digital Preservation Intake Coordinator, obtained her MI, and worked with the Digital Curation Institute as a Research Assistant. Before coming to the University of Toronto... Read More →
Authors
avatar for Jess Whyte

Jess Whyte

Digital Assets Librarian, University of Toronto
Jess Whyte is the Digital Assets Librarian at the University of Toronto, where she previously held the position of Digital Preservation Intake Coordinator, obtained her MI, and worked with the Digital Curation Institute as a Research Assistant. Before coming to the University of Toronto... Read More →
Thursday May 29, 2025 2:00pm - 2:30pm CDT
Hyatt Regency Minneapolis

2:00pm CDT

(Objects) New African Masquerades: Flexible mounts for a collaborative exhibition
Thursday May 29, 2025 2:00pm - 2:30pm CDT
The exhibition New African Masquerades: Artistic Innovations and Collaborations will open at the New Orleans Museum of Art in April 2025. Five masquerade ensembles were mounted in 2024 in preparation for this exhibition, a challenge with no mountmaker on staff. This paper will detail the construction of the posable figural supports, made with aluminum tubing and locking hinges, and the decision-making across roles and continents that led to this design strategy.The exhibition aims to model more ethical ways to collect and display African art through direct commissioning rather than secondary market acquisitions, and collaborative presentation, emphasizing the ability of Africans to tell their own stories. To accomplish this, a team of eight people was assembledthree masquerade artists from Nigeria, Sierra Leone, and Burkina Faso, three American scholars, each with a longstanding research relationship with one of the masquerade artists, another artist/researcher from Cameroon, a research director of a museum in Senegal, and a curatorial assistant from Ethiopia.This team agreed that it was important for the display to reflect the liveliness of masquerade practice, and the physicality of the bodies inside the ensembles. Countering the history of Western museums displaying just the headpieces as abstract sculptures rather than full body suits worn by humans, the appearance of the bodies in New African Masquerades would impact viewer interpretation, and therefore their fabrication presented a variety of potential pitfalls.Specific poses were requested that standard retail mannequins could not provide. The ensembles weight and the five-venue schedule called for strength and durability. Shelly Uhlirs mounts for the NMAIs exhibition Circle of Danceprovided both conceptual inspiration and a specific product that became critical to the project: a click-adjustable aluminum hinge. These allowed the construction of strong supports without welding for asymmetrical, naturalistic poses, with the added benefit of being partially adjustable even during installationinvaluable with a curatorial team of nine.Because of the artists preference for realism, the exposed hands and feet were cast in epoxy and painted brown. The weighty history of museum displays of Black bodies has been previously discussed, notably by Stephenson and Gunsch, and the appropriate degree of realism as well as the color was carefully considered by the team.Also presented will be lessons learned while installing with the full curatorial team, all nine of whom are planned to be present at NOMA, and the practicalities and ethics of the removal of original material required by the artists to meet their standards of beauty in display.
Speakers
avatar for Ingrid  Seyb

Ingrid Seyb

Objects Conservator, New Orleans Museum of Art
The objects conservator at the New Orleans Museum of Art since 2022, Ingrid was previously Associate Objects Conservator at the Museum of Fine Arts Houston for eleven years.
Authors
avatar for Ingrid  Seyb

Ingrid Seyb

Objects Conservator, New Orleans Museum of Art
The objects conservator at the New Orleans Museum of Art since 2022, Ingrid was previously Associate Objects Conservator at the Museum of Fine Arts Houston for eleven years.
Thursday May 29, 2025 2:00pm - 2:30pm CDT
Hyatt Regency Minneapolis

2:00pm CDT

(Paintings) Case studies in Collaboration: 17th century painting workshops to 21st century conservation studios
Thursday May 29, 2025 2:00pm - 2:30pm CDT
Collaboration among painters was a defining feature of Flemish painting, particularly among practitioners in 17th century Antwerp. Peter Paul Rubens (1557-1640) and Frans Snijders (1579-1657) periodically worked together, producing artworks of exceptional quality, where their individual contributions were integrated yet distinct. This talk will explore the materials and techniques used in the artistic partnership of Rubens and Snijders, through the case study of a large jointly created painting Larder Still Life with Housekeeper and Young Boy (1636-1638; J. Paul Getty Museum, Los Angeles). In the Getty Larder, the still life was painted by Snijders and his studio while the figures were painted by Rubens’ studio. The talk will demonstrate how technical examination can help us understand how these two artists, each with their own distinct styles, combined their strengths to create a unified work of art.  

The Getty Larder was studied using a range of imaging and analytical techniques including: X-radiography, multispectral imaging, infrared reflectography, cross-section analysis coupled with scanning electron microscopy, spot X-ray fluorescence (XRF) spectroscopy, scanning macro XRF spectroscopy, FTIR, and chromatographic methods. These methods yielded copious information about the work’s stratigraphy and preparation. Combining this analysis with close examination of the paint surface, while referring to a preparatory oil sketch made by Rubens (Kitchen Maid, Butcher and Boy around a Table, KMSKA, Antwerp) and two other related paintings (in private collections) portraying similar yet distinct compositions, a step-by-step development of the Getty Larder could be explicated. The examination revealed that the still life was painted first followed by the figures and suggested that the two collaborators had created an efficient workflow to execute large paintings. The technical study also identified areas of pigment degradation and fading which have caused significant color shifts in the painting.   

Even with all this information, unravelling the intricacies of Rubens’ and Snijders’ partnership presented significant challenges. The scarcity of primary sources documenting collaborative processes, the lack of carbon-based underdrawings, the use of similar pigments and binding media across the picture, and the painting’s conservation history made it difficult to separate individual contributions based on material composition alone. Furthermore, characterizing collaboration is complex as Rubens oversaw a large, successful studio with many assistants and students participating in the painting process. Much less is known about other painters working in Antwerp. This talk will present new insights gleaned despite these challenges, providing important context in understanding Rubens’ and Snijders’ collaborative process. 

Undertaking the technical study and treatment of this painting, including removal of degraded natural resin and synthetic varnishes, highlighted how conservation practice in the 21st century is an equally collaborative endeavor. It involves the curator’s expertise, the conservation scientist’s analysis, and the conservator’s knowledge to bridge and synthesize art historical, material, and chemical information. It is only fitting that working with different colleagues has been crucial to generating new insights into the shared working practices of Rubens and Snijders, underscoring the power of collaboration. Artists in 17th century Flemish paintings did not operate in a vacuum and neither do 21st century conservation studios.
Speakers
avatar for Nikita Shah

Nikita Shah

Assistant Conservator of Paintings, Museum of Fine Arts, Houston
Nikita Shah is an Assistant Conservator of Paintings at Museum of Fine Arts, Houston. She earned an M.A. in Art Conservation from the National Museum Institute in New Delhi, India; followed by an M.S. in Conservation and Restoration of Cultural Heritage from the University of Amsterdam... Read More →
Authors
avatar for Nikita Shah

Nikita Shah

Assistant Conservator of Paintings, Museum of Fine Arts, Houston
Nikita Shah is an Assistant Conservator of Paintings at Museum of Fine Arts, Houston. She earned an M.A. in Art Conservation from the National Museum Institute in New Delhi, India; followed by an M.S. in Conservation and Restoration of Cultural Heritage from the University of Amsterdam... Read More →
avatar for Catherine Schmidt Patterson

Catherine Schmidt Patterson

Associate Scientist, J Paul Getty Museum
Catherine Schmidt Patterson is a Scientist at the Getty Conservation Institute (GCI), where she is a member of the Technical Studies research group. Her primary areas of research are the use of non- or minimally-invasive techniques such as Raman microspectroscopy, x-ray fluorescence... Read More →
avatar for Herant Khanjian

Herant Khanjian

Assistant Scientist, Getty Conservation Institute
Herant Khanjian received his undergraduate degree in chemistry from California State University, Northridge and has been a member in the Science department of the Getty Conservation Institute since 1988. His research interests involve the detection and identification of organic media... Read More →
avatar for Joy Mazurek

Joy Mazurek

Assistant Scientist, Getty Conservation Institute
Joy Mazurek is an Associate Scientist at the Getty Conservation Institute. She specializes in the identification of binding media in paint using Gas Chromatography Mass Spectrometry, the characterization and degradation of plastics, and the application of biological methods to study... Read More →
avatar for Kari Rayner

Kari Rayner

Associate Conservator of Paintings, J Paul Getty Museum
Kari Rayner is an Associate Conservator of Paintings at the J. Paul Getty Museum. She completed her graduate training at the Conservation Center of the Institute of Fine Arts, New York University, receiving an MA in art history and Advanced Certificate in conservation. Prior to joining... Read More →
Thursday May 29, 2025 2:00pm - 2:30pm CDT
Hyatt Regency Minneapolis

2:00pm CDT

(Photographic Materials) Application of High-Resolution Multispectral Imaging Systems for the Very-Long-Term Monitoring of Degradation Over Time of Photographs, Paintings, Fabrics, Documents, Books, and Other Cultural Heritage Materials
Thursday May 29, 2025 2:00pm - 2:30pm CDT
Henry Wilhelm,
Founder and Director of Research and Publications
Wilhelm Imaging Research, Inc., Grinnell, Iowa, U.S.A.

Co-Authors:

Ken Boydston
Chief Engineer and Color Scientist
MegaVision, Inc., Ventura, California, U.S.A.

Joe Uziel
Curator and Head of Dead Sea Scrolls Unit
Israel Antiquities Authority, Jerusalem, Israel

Shai Halevei
Chief Photographer and Head of Multispectral Capture
Israel Antiquities Authority, Jerusalem, Israel

High-resolution multispectral imaging provides periodic full-image area, non-destructive and zero-contactmonitoring over both short and very long periods of time of cultural heritage materials, including photographs, paintings, fabrics, documents, books, tapestries, and other works of artistic and historicimportance with very large data sets consisting of up to ten thousand or more discrete colorimetric data pointsfor the short-term and long-term monitoring of full-tonal-scale – generally nonlinear – colorimetric changes (including in the UV and IR regions), in a fully time-integrated manner, that may take place over time in thefull image area and in the support material (front and back). Multispectral imaging can accurately monitor rates of degradation of optical brightening agents (OBAs) and can quantify gradual yellowish or other stain formation in photographs, including albumen prints, polyethylene coated (RC) papers, and other materials.

Multispectral imaging provides the ability to monitor glazed works periodically during exhibition without the necessity of removing glass or plastic sheets from their frames while the works remain on the wall. Likewise, works housed in anoxic frames may be monitored over the long term without opening the frames. Irregularities in image deterioration and/or staining brought about by localized variations with photographic materials and their chemical processing, washing, contamination during drying, or as a result of selenium, sepia, gold, or other chemical toning treatments, coating and varnish layers, laminates, and other steps employed in the creation and finishing of the work, integrated with the inevitably non-uniform contact with mounting, framing, and storage materials over time, and the effects of exposure to non-uniform lighting, environmental and “micro-climate” temperature and relative humidity conditions, can be assessed and compared over long periods of time in all areas of an image – including within very small image details.

Representative times currently required for a MegaVision camera-based high-resolution capture of an object are:
1 minute and 16 seconds for 16 sequential image captures with 16 different waveband illuminants (with no filter wheel captures), with an integrated lux exposure of 0.12 lux/hour (equivalent to <10 seconds of display at 50 lux), and 3 minutes and 15 seconds for 26 sequential image captures with 26 different waveband illuminants (capture time includes 10 filter wheel captures for a more comprehensive OBA degradation analysis), with an integrated lux exposure of 0.33 lux hour (equivalent to <1 minute of display at 50 lux). High-resolution multispectral camera captures provide extremely accurate color images that are superior to RGB captures. These images can be used to automatically generate lower-resolution RGB images for cataloging, websites, publications, posters, and other uses. These high-resolution images can also readily be used to make color-accurate facsimile prints for exhibitions and study. Multispectral imaging employed as a routine part of the acquisition and accessioning process provides a “time-zero” set of high-resolution spectral data for every object that can then be used for very-long-term monitoring.

This presentation will consider the formidable technical challenges of very-long-term monitoring in the context of the now more than 2,000-year-old Dead Sea Scrolls in Israel, and the ongoing programs to systematically multispectrally capture each scroll and scroll fragment, monitor, and preserve the delicateparchment scrolls and scroll fragments. During the coming hundreds or many thousands of years into the future, every single part of a multispectral imaging system and the associated computers, software and data storage systems, calibration targets – and our understanding of color science itself – will repeatedly become obsolete and must be replaced with new systems. Strategies thatwill ensure a continued high degree of accuracy relative to the original measurements are proposed.

Without a comprehensive multispectral monitoring program, conservators and other institutional caretakers will have little or no quantitative data concerning what has actually been happening to their collections as they age over time, and with the understanding that comes with that quantitative information, of how degradation may be slowed or halted by changes in display and loan policies, by the use of humidity-controlled refrigerated and sub-zero freezer preservation, and by other means, some of which are yet to be developed.

References:

  1. Henry Wilhelm, “Monitoring the Fading and Staining of Color Photographic Prints,” Journal of the American Institute for Conservation, Vol. 21, No. 1, Fall 1981, American Institute for Conservation (AIC), Washington, District of Columbia, U.S.A., pp. 49-64.
  2. JPL (Jet Propulsion Laboratory, Pasadena, California), “Conceptual Design of a Monitoring System for the Charters of Freedom,” Jet Propulsion Laboratory Publication 83-102, March 15, 1984. The Jet Propulsion Laboratory is under the jurisdiction of the California Institute of Technology, and is administered and funded by the National Aeronautics and Space Administration (NASA), a U.S. Government Agency that began operations in 1958.
  3. Douglas G. Severson (The Art Institute of Chicago), “The Effect of Exhibition on Photographs,” Topics in Photographic Preservation – 1986 (compiled by Maria S. Holden), Vol. 1, pp. 38-42, 1986. American Institute for Conservation Photographic Materials Group, American Institute for Conservation (AIC), Washington, District of Columbia, U.S.A. Slightly revised, the article was reprinted in Picturescope, Vol. 32, No. 4, Winter 1967, pp. 133-135.
  4. Alan R. Calmes, “Monitoring the U.S. Charters of Freedom by Electronic Imaging,” (U.S. National Archives and Records Administration, Washington, District of Columbia, U.S.A.), Proceedings of the International Symposium: Conservation in Archives, National Archives of Canada in conjunction with the International Council on Archives, Ottawa, Ontario, Canada, May 10-12, 1988, pp. 243-251.
  5. John McElhone (National Gallery of Canada), “Determining Responsible Display Conditions for Photographs,” presentation at The Centre for Photographic Conservation Conference ’92: The Imperfect Image: Photographs, their Past, Present, and Future, Windermere, Cumbria, England, United Kingdom, April 6–10, 1992.
  6. Henry Wilhelm, “Monitoring the Fading and Staining of Color Photographs in Museum and Archive Collections,”
    pages 239-266 in Chapter 7, “The Permanence and Care of Color Photographs: Traditional and Digital Color Prints, Color Negatives, Slides, and Motion Pictures,” by Henry Wilhelm withcontributing author Carol Brower, Preservation Publishing Company, Grinnell, Iowa, U.S.A., 1993.
  7. W.A. Christens-Barry, K. Boydston, F.G. France, K.T. Knox, R.L. Easton, and M.B. Toth, “Proc. SPIE, San Jose, CA, 7249(8), 1-10 (2009).
  8. Marc Kaufman, “Jefferson changed ‘subjects’ to ‘citizens’ in Declaration of Independence,” The Washington Post, July 3, 2010. “It took research scientist Fenella France [using a MegaVision Multispectral Imaging and Analysis System] weeks to pull out each letter until the full word became apparent.” “Finding Jefferson’s erased word is the library’s greatest accomplishment using its new technology, but several other projects are in progress. The imaging device, for instance, found thumb and fingerprints on the Gettysburg Address using infrared light, and library researchers are seeking to determine whether they are President Abraham Lincoln’s…” “[Library of Congress Preservation Director, Dianne van der Reyden] said the research and discoveries illustrate why it’s so important to keep and protect original documents. The erased ‘subjects,’ she said, could have been detected only from Jefferson’s original draft.

    IMPORTANT NOTE: Because of word-count limits on the AIC Program website, this version of the abstract has been truncated. To download the full 12-page abstract, complete with twenty-five references and the authors’ biographies, please click on this link:

    http://www.wilhelm-research.com/WIR_AIC/AIC_2025_Wilhelm-Boydston_Uziel_Halevei_Abstract_Ver_3_(2025-02-01).pdf
...
Speakers
avatar for Henry Wilhelm

Henry Wilhelm

Founder and Director of Research, Wilhelm Imaging Research, Inc.
Henry Wilhelm is the founder and director of research at Wilhelm Imaging Research, Inc. Through its website, the company publishes print permanence data for desktop and large-format inkjet printers, silver-halide color papers, digital presses, UV-curable printers, dye sublimation... Read More →
Authors
avatar for Henry Wilhelm

Henry Wilhelm

Founder and Director of Research, Wilhelm Imaging Research, Inc.
Henry Wilhelm is the founder and director of research at Wilhelm Imaging Research, Inc. Through its website, the company publishes print permanence data for desktop and large-format inkjet printers, silver-halide color papers, digital presses, UV-curable printers, dye sublimation... Read More →
KB

Ken Boydston

Photographer & CEO, MegaVision
Ken Boydston has 40 years of contributions to the development of digital imaging, from leading the team that developed the first world's first digital camera used in commercial photography to developing the world's first integrated multi-spectral imaging system for cultural heritage... Read More →
Thursday May 29, 2025 2:00pm - 2:30pm CDT
Hyatt Regency Minneapolis

2:00pm CDT

(Preventive Care) Meeting in the Middle: Best Practices and Practical Actions Unite in Community Collaboration
Thursday May 29, 2025 2:00pm - 2:30pm CDT
Small cultural heritage institutions like community-based archives and museums rarely have preservation expertise. Best preservation and archival practices may not be their main focus – keeping and telling their story is. An outreach event, Preservation in Action, collaborates with organizations like this to implement aspects of collections care while balancing their community-centered mission. Organized through the long active Preservation Section of the American Library Association (ALA), the day-long outreach event takes place at the annual ALA conference. Preservation in Action (PiA) has a 3-prong approach to working with organizations representing an underserved community: 1) provide preservation training to staff; 2) introduce preservation to conference attendees whose jobs may or may not involve collections care; 3) rehouse collections with a “many hands make light work” model. PiA is specifically not a “service project,” but a collaboration between trained preservation librarians and these institutions that lack expertise. The training and hands-on activities with participants who have different levels of experience can be unpredictable but always enriching



A grant-funded archiving initiative at a Puerto Rican Cultural Center has led to a growing collection of posters documenting decades of social justice activism in the Boricua community. The colorful screenprinted posters fit into oversize folders and boxes, except for a group that had been glued to cardboard. The situation required on-the-spot decisions and conversations with the staff. In this case, the archivist decided to leave the newsprint posters on the acidic board and order more archival boxes later. We relied on each other to offer solutions



At a Chinese History Museum, we found extensively embroidered and beaded textiles during the group rehousing project. I wanted to bulk up any harsh creases, but the collections manager was concerned about losing box space with just one dress. Through joint problem-solving, we found a middle ground to protect the textile without taking up too much room



Other times our progress fades. At an organization with changing staff and strategic visions, the housing of photos and re-sleeving of a famous DJ’s LPs was later changed or undone. The artifacts’ uses evolved



Over the past several years, I’ve learned lessons about organizing these events at archives and museums. A stable infrastructure is necessary. Logistics like monitoring a waiting list, delivery of supplies, and ordering lunch are time consuming. Having a local committee member is best to evaluate the collections and estimate supplies. A participant will always ask a wonderfully unanswerable question. While institutions learn from us, we also learn from them. Our strict best practices aren’t an option for many organizations. This provides us with an opportunity to be flexible, think creatively, and listen to those outside our profession.

 

[Images in the poster would include: visually interesting posters, intricate Chinese textiles, photos in housings, and group action shots, hands shown only.]
Speakers
avatar for Katie Risseeuw

Katie Risseeuw

Preservation Librarian, Northwestern University
Katie Risseeuw is the Preservation Librarian at Northwestern University Libraries. She supervises preventative conservation activities including environmental monitoring, commercial binding, mass deacidification, preservation assessments, collection care of general collections, audiovisual... Read More →
Authors
avatar for Katie Risseeuw

Katie Risseeuw

Preservation Librarian, Northwestern University
Katie Risseeuw is the Preservation Librarian at Northwestern University Libraries. She supervises preventative conservation activities including environmental monitoring, commercial binding, mass deacidification, preservation assessments, collection care of general collections, audiovisual... Read More →
Thursday May 29, 2025 2:00pm - 2:30pm CDT
Hyatt Regency Minneapolis

2:00pm CDT

(Research & Technical Studies) A multi-disciplinary solution for the problem of lead corrosion in organ pipes
Thursday May 29, 2025 2:00pm - 2:30pm CDT
The corrosion of historic organ pipes continues to be a major problem for older historic organs in Europe. This is particularly true in the pipe feet of the larger bass pipes which are made primarily of lead. Corrosion in the pipe foot reduces the load-carrying capacity of the pipes, and makes them more difficult, if not, impossible to tune as corrosion eats away at the pipe wall and eventually breaks through. A number of recent major research projects including the EU COLLAPSE project and a project in Bremen, Germany indicate that the cause is corrosion of lead by acetic and formic acids emitted from the wooden windchest. Several measures have been suggested for dealing with the problem including neutralizing or removing residual acid in the corrosion product, coating the insides of the pipe feet, or replacing the feet with lead-tin alloys. 

This research has been primarily chemical in nature. While it provides evidence for the cause of corrosion, the proposed measures have a number of logistical and conservation ethics problems. The production of the acids is continuous, which means that pipes have to be treated regularly with some kind of aggressive solution. Coatings must be regularly maintained and replaced. Given that the affected pipes are usually the large bass pipes in a complex organ structure, such treatments would be a difficult operation to carry out regularly. Furthermore, the proposed measures only treat the symptoms and not the source of the problem, the acid emission into the pipes. 

It was noted in the previously mentioned projects that corrosion tended to be worse in organs which were not played as often, and in silent pipes. This led to a multidisciplinary pilot study conducted by the Cultural Heritage Agency of the Netherlands (RCE) to investigate the possibility of venting the pipes when the organs are not played. A team including an organ expert, a Dutch organ builder, chemists and fluid mechanics experts is studying the airflow through pipes as they are played, to see if that correlates with the corrosion in the pipe feet. Three-dimensional (3D) computer modelling and high-speed smoke visualization techniques are being used to determine the airflow within a transparent organ pipe, and locate eventual “dead” zones where corrosive gas concentrations may be higher. Endoscopic techniques are being used to determine the location of the corrosion in pipe feet. A sensor is being developed to measure the acid concentrations in the air in pipe feet.

The results of the fluid mechanics studies and initial endoscopic work indicate that corrosion correlates with dead air zones in the pipe foot. Venting the pipes is possible, and would be best accomplished by reversing the air flow in the pipe, that is, in the opposite direction to playing. Further work is planned to determine how often venting is required, and the most efficient way of doing this using the existing blower, as well as dealing with the fact that the organ will be continuously producing tones while being vented.
Speakers
avatar for William Wei

William Wei

Senior Conservation Scientist, vibmech.nl
Dr. W. (Bill) Wei (1955) is a retired senior conservation scientist in the Research Department of the Cultural Heritage Agency of the Netherlands (RCE - Rijksdienst voor het Cultureel Erfgoed). He has a B.S.E. in mechanical engineering from Princeton University (1977) and a Ph.D... Read More →
Authors
avatar for Mateusz Sluszkiewicz

Mateusz Sluszkiewicz

Student, Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute
Mateusz Sluszkiewicz is a stress engineer at Gulfstream Aerospace Corporation conducting finite element analysis and design reviews of various aerospace structures.He completed undergraduate studies of aeronautical and mechanical engineering at Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute in... Read More →
avatar for William Wei

William Wei

Senior Conservation Scientist, vibmech.nl
Dr. W. (Bill) Wei (1955) is a retired senior conservation scientist in the Research Department of the Cultural Heritage Agency of the Netherlands (RCE - Rijksdienst voor het Cultureel Erfgoed). He has a B.S.E. in mechanical engineering from Princeton University (1977) and a Ph.D... Read More →
Thursday May 29, 2025 2:00pm - 2:30pm CDT
Hyatt Regency Minneapolis

2:00pm CDT

(Textiles) Facing the Unknown Together: Conservation of Mexican Costume Collection by Pedro Loredo
Thursday May 29, 2025 2:00pm - 2:30pm CDT
Pedro Loredo (1923-2010) was a Mexican fashion designer who stood out for his distinctive style that drew heavily on Mexico’s pre-Hispanic heritage, incorporating elements like Mitla architecture and Mexica designs. Named "ambassador of Mexican fashion to the world” he created a collection of over five hundred dresses, as well as designed costumes for Mexican talk shows, movies, and “telenovelas.” After his passing, these costumes were safeguarded by his sons, Tonatiuh and Pedro Loredo, who cherished them as a testament to their father’s legacy. Our connection with them began with treatment on one of the dresses during our college years and continued with the Loredo family's plan to write a book about his life and work.

Since that moment, our collaboration transformed the conservation project into a shared journey of discovery. Their insight, as knowledge keepers, into the designer's life was a guide for our work as conservators. Through this project, we demonstrated how facing the unknown together—through open communication and nourishing relationships—can lead to more meaningful conservation outcomes.  The conservation proposal for "The Pedro Loredo Costume Collection,” includes the creation of a survey form addressing the condition report, the characterization of the collection, and an assessment of the storage location.

The proposal was based on a “Systems Approach” methodology that examines interactions between the Collection, Space, Operators, and Users. Documenting the collection and uncovering its scope, variety, and condition, which had been unknown for years. The proposal also involved cataloging the costume collection, assessing the condition of the storage space, and conducting discussions and interviews with conservators, photographers, fashion historians, and the knowledge keepers.This model, focused on human aspects, helps us to identify key areas for maintaining the collection and collaborating in more enriched ways with our professional experience as conservators.

During this process, we recognized the value of building a relationship with the owners to reconstruct the history of the collection and detect priorities. Understanding the deep personal and historical significance of the collection through interviews and listening to their stories, we were able to make better-informed decisions throughout the conservation project. These narratives not only enriched our approach to Pedro Loredo's work but also allowed us to reconstruct a significant period in the history of Mexican fashion, and to highlight the need for specialized conservation efforts in this field.
Speakers
ZP

Zulema Paz Rodriguez

Andrew W. Mellon Fellow in Photograph Conservation, National Gallery of Art
Zulema Paz is an Andrew W. Mellon Fellow at The Department of Photograph Conservation at The National Gallery of Art, Washington, D.C. She holds a BA from Mexico’s National School of Conservation, where she graduated with a thesis on preventive conservation and care of a textile... Read More →
avatar for Alejandra Flores Paredes

Alejandra Flores Paredes

Andrew W. Mellon Fellow in the Department of Textile Conservation, Metropolitan Museum of Art
Alejandra Flores is an Andrew W. Mellon Fellow in The Department of Textile Conservation at The Metropolitan Museum of Art, where she collaborates with The European Sculpture and Decorative Arts and The American Wing Textiles Collections. Her previous project focused on 19th-century... Read More →
Authors
ZP

Zulema Paz Rodriguez

Andrew W. Mellon Fellow in Photograph Conservation, National Gallery of Art
Zulema Paz is an Andrew W. Mellon Fellow at The Department of Photograph Conservation at The National Gallery of Art, Washington, D.C. She holds a BA from Mexico’s National School of Conservation, where she graduated with a thesis on preventive conservation and care of a textile... Read More →
avatar for Alejandra Flores Paredes

Alejandra Flores Paredes

Andrew W. Mellon Fellow in the Department of Textile Conservation, Metropolitan Museum of Art
Alejandra Flores is an Andrew W. Mellon Fellow in The Department of Textile Conservation at The Metropolitan Museum of Art, where she collaborates with The European Sculpture and Decorative Arts and The American Wing Textiles Collections. Her previous project focused on 19th-century... Read More →
Thursday May 29, 2025 2:00pm - 2:30pm CDT
Hyatt Regency Minneapolis

2:30pm CDT

(Architecture) Heat, Humidity, and Pressure: Leveraging Techniques from Other Disciplines to Preserve Graffiti and Architectural Paints at a Historic Prison Museum
Thursday May 29, 2025 2:30pm - 3:00pm CDT
In October 2023, conservators from Jablonski Building Conservation (JBC) performed a uniquely challenging paint stabilization treatment to preserve prisoner graffiti on thickly layered, severely distorted architectural paint applied to the brick and plaster walls of the Burlington County Prison Museum in Mt. Holly, New Jersey. The prison was completed around 1811 and was in continual use until 1965, with cell walls covered in 50-100+ layers of accumulated whitewash, distemper, and oil paints. Temperature and humidity fluctuations, water infiltration, changes in use, and structural repairs have culminated in the loss, deterioration, and distortion of much of the site’s intriguing and extensive prisoner graffiti on the dense paint finishes.

Guidance and research on flattening is widely available for other media such as paper, painted artworks, and decorative arts, but is almost nonexistent for architectural paint – particularly in a vernacular and arrested decay setting such as at the Burlington County Prison Museum. So, to improve legibility and increase surface area for securing paint fragments to the walls, JBC drew on techniques used in paper, paintings, and objects conservation by using heat, humidity and pressure to relax the most severely curled paint fragments. This unconventional treatment approach devised by JBC for the Burlington County Prison Museum exemplifies the value of leveraging techniques and knowledge from other disciplines, while amplifying the unique challenges of performing conservation treatments on architectural finishes in an uncontrolled environment.   

This presentation will elaborate on JBC’s approach, techniques, challenges, and results of the paint and graffiti preservation campaign at Burlington County Prison Museum and invite a broader discussion across disciplines about existing research, techniques, and case studies that could help inform similar architectural finishes conservation projects and research in the future.
Speakers
avatar for Meris Westberg

Meris Westberg

Architectural Conservator, Jablonksi Building Conservation
Meris Westberg is an architectural conservator living and working in New York City. She began her career in Washington DC, working in library and archives conservation at the National Park Service and National Archives and Records Administration, then transitioned to Preventive and... Read More →
Authors
avatar for Meris Westberg

Meris Westberg

Architectural Conservator, Jablonksi Building Conservation
Meris Westberg is an architectural conservator living and working in New York City. She began her career in Washington DC, working in library and archives conservation at the National Park Service and National Archives and Records Administration, then transitioned to Preventive and... Read More →
Thursday May 29, 2025 2:30pm - 3:00pm CDT
Hyatt Regency Minneapolis

2:30pm CDT

(Book and Paper) Archivists and Conservators: An Unlikely Love Story
Thursday May 29, 2025 2:30pm - 3:00pm CDT
In this presentation, an archivist and a conservator will share their experiences working and learning together over the past decade, as well as their research on a persistent communication gap between their professions. This gap often leads to missed opportunities for collaboration that could benefit archivists and conservation, as well as the collections and the communities they serve. The gap widened in the wake of the seminal archival management article “More Product, Less Process,” published by Mark Greene and Dennis Meissner in 2005, which advocated for more efficient practices to reduce backlogs and make collections more accessible. In this article, conservation activities were portrayed as excessive and unnecessary. As a result, many archivists became dismissive of conservation, leading to tensions and a sense of misrepresentation within the conservation community.

The presentation will introduce a model for integrating preventive conservation into a holistic collection management program. When building new workflows for archival accessioning and processing, the presenters worked together to proactively develop local standards for collection management. These standards address known legacy issues and improve collections care work going forward. 

This model emphasizes the importance of archivists and conservators learning each other's professional ethics, standards, and training to improve communication and foster more effective collaboration, while embracing humility, curiosity, and mutual respect. This learning occurs through committee work, reading groups, collection planning meetings, after action reviews, and events. Open discussion of our different priorities and perspectives pave the way for creating institutional programs that promote ethical, sustainable collection stewardship and have the potential for improving work experiences. The presenters will tell the stories of successes and challenges faced in their collaborations.
Speakers
avatar for Laura McCann

Laura McCann

Director, NYU Libraries
Laura McCann is the Director and Conservation Librarian in the Barbara Goldsmith Preservation and Conservation Department at New York University (NYU) Libraries. Previously, she served as the Conservation Librarian at NYU Libraries and the Deputy Director of the NYC Municipal Archives... Read More →
avatar for Weatherly Stephan

Weatherly Stephan

Head, Archival Collections Management, NYU Libraries
Weatherly A. Stephan is the Head of Archival Collections Management at New York University Libraries, where she oversees archival accessioning, processing, and digital preservation activities for the NYU Special Collections. Prior to her appointment at NYU, she held processing positions... Read More →
Authors
avatar for Laura McCann

Laura McCann

Director, NYU Libraries
Laura McCann is the Director and Conservation Librarian in the Barbara Goldsmith Preservation and Conservation Department at New York University (NYU) Libraries. Previously, she served as the Conservation Librarian at NYU Libraries and the Deputy Director of the NYC Municipal Archives... Read More →
avatar for Weatherly Stephan

Weatherly Stephan

Head, Archival Collections Management, NYU Libraries
Weatherly A. Stephan is the Head of Archival Collections Management at New York University Libraries, where she oversees archival accessioning, processing, and digital preservation activities for the NYU Special Collections. Prior to her appointment at NYU, she held processing positions... Read More →
Thursday May 29, 2025 2:30pm - 3:00pm CDT
Hyatt Regency Minneapolis

2:30pm CDT

(Contemporary Art)Mud Musings: Changing Systems and Ideas in Robert Rauschenberg’s Sound-Activated Artworks
Thursday May 29, 2025 2:30pm - 3:00pm CDT
Robert Rauschenberg’s Mud Muse (1969-1971) consists of a large rectangular vat filled with a mixture of water and bentonite clay. Within the vat, the mud bubbles in response to the recorded sound of its own bubbling through an audio-activated compressed-air system. Mud Muse was donated to the Moderna Museet in 1973 and remains one of the museum’s key works. Yet despite its popularity its mechanism is often misunderstood, veiled in rumor and mythology with self-fulfilling repetition, some of which originated with the artist himself.

Rauschenberg began experimenting with interactive sound artworks in the 1960s, often in collaboration with engineer Billy Klüver, in what would become known as Experiments in Art and Technology (E.A.T.). Rauschenberg continued this exploration in Mud Muse together with engineers from Teledyne and sound artist Petrie Mason Robie through the Art & Technology program at the Los Angeles County Museum of Art.

Mud Muse’s initial production was characterized by a series of compromises and adjustments, both conceptual and mechanical, to create a sculpture that functioned (roughly) as Rauschenberg intended. Both the art historical record and material evidence point to its having been reconsidered and reconfigured almost continuously up until – and likely beyond – its public debut. As its own prototype, the sculpture shows evidence of several changing approaches during its creation, along with that of later repair campaigns. Fully parsing these changes, as well as the reasoning behind them, was crucial to understanding the work’s “ideal” state, and therefore to determining what interventions are appropriate to conserve and install the work as the most accurate manifestation of Rauschenberg’s idea.

For decades, Mud Muse was exclusively installed by Moderna Museet electricians and very little written documentation was created. When the latest electrician retired in 2018, no permanent museum staff-member had a complete understanding of how to install and operate the piece. To steward the work responsibly, it was crucial for the museum to re-establish this institutional knowledge.

In 2019, Tora Hederus and My Bundgaard initiated research at Moderna Museet into the construction and history of Mud Muse, hoping to better understand the functions of the technical components and their importance in relation to Rauschenberg’s ideas. Their research in the archives at both the Moderna Museet and the Robert Rauschenberg Foundation focused particularly on the creation of the sound tape, the choice of tape recorder, amplifiers, and frequency dividers. In 2024, NYU graduate student Caroline Carlsmith joined the research team, bringing previous experience working with Rauschenberg’s first sound-activated E.A.T. artwork Soundings (1968) at the Museum Ludwig in Cologne. Working together, these conservators from different backgrounds were able to better identify systems that had been attempted and abandoned as well as later changes made as components failed over time. Their collaborative investigations suggested that the conflicting stories in literature about the work were not all accurate. A more comprehensive technical art history based on close study of the electrical and pneumatic systems enabled the most optimal installation and was necessary to understand what Mud Muse had been and how it had come to be.
Speakers
avatar for My Bundgaard

My Bundgaard

Modern Sculpture Conservator, Moderna Museet
My Bundgaard is a modern sculpture conservator at Moderna Museet in Stockholm, Sweden. She holds a B.Sc. and M.Sc. from KADK, The Royal Danish Academy of Fine Arts, School of Architecture, Design, and Conservation and is a specialist of Modern and Contemporary Art with a particular... Read More →
avatar for Caroline Carlsmith

Caroline Carlsmith

Mellon Foundation Fellow in Time-based Media Art Conservation, Conservation Center, Institute of Fine Arts, New York University
Caroline Carlsmith is a Mellon Foundation Fellow in Time-Based Media Art Conservation at the Conservation Center of the Institute of Fine Arts, New York University, where she studies the preservation of contemporary art. She holds dual bachelor’s degrees in Studio Art and Visual... Read More →
Authors
avatar for My Bundgaard

My Bundgaard

Modern Sculpture Conservator, Moderna Museet
My Bundgaard is a modern sculpture conservator at Moderna Museet in Stockholm, Sweden. She holds a B.Sc. and M.Sc. from KADK, The Royal Danish Academy of Fine Arts, School of Architecture, Design, and Conservation and is a specialist of Modern and Contemporary Art with a particular... Read More →
avatar for Caroline Carlsmith

Caroline Carlsmith

Mellon Foundation Fellow in Time-based Media Art Conservation, Conservation Center, Institute of Fine Arts, New York University
Caroline Carlsmith is a Mellon Foundation Fellow in Time-Based Media Art Conservation at the Conservation Center of the Institute of Fine Arts, New York University, where she studies the preservation of contemporary art. She holds dual bachelor’s degrees in Studio Art and Visual... Read More →
avatar for Tora Hederus

Tora Hederus

Paper Conservator, Nationalmuseum
Tora Hederus is a paper conservator at Nationalmuseum in Stockholm, Sweden. She holds a B.Sc. and M.Sc. from KADK, The Royal Danish Academy of Fine Arts, School of Architecture, Design, and Conservation, and she specialized on modern and contemporary art. Since graduation, Tora has... Read More →
Thursday May 29, 2025 2:30pm - 3:00pm CDT
Hyatt Regency Minneapolis

2:30pm CDT

(Electronic Media) Machine Learning in Art: Tools, Techniques, and Implications for Conservation
Thursday May 29, 2025 2:30pm - 3:00pm CDT
How is machine learning used to create works of art? How do machine learning technologies work? What are the various software tools and programming languages that are available to artists? What are the conservation problems that arise with each of these techniques?

The software applications that artists use for creating works of art which integrate or are based on machine learning fall into several categories. For artists who do not know how to program, or prefer not to program, and/or do not have opportunities to collaborate with programmers, there are text-to-image applications in which an artist creates images generated through textual description. Examples from the New York City bitforms gallery exhibition DALL·E: Artificial Imagination (October 26–Dec 29, 2022) demonstrate this approach.[1] 

Newly created images using text-to-image techniques can be loosely based on predefined styles provided by the software authors or company; or the artist can “train” a model to use style-transfer based on the artist’s own original digital-born images or digital surrogates of physical artworks in order to instruct the software to computationally mimic the artist’s own or another style. The Whitney Museum of American Art’s xhairymutantx Embedding 2024 by Holly Herndon and Mat Dryhurst (2024) is an example of style-transfer.[2]

With advanced beginner or intermediate programming skills, artists may prefer writing original code such as Python scripts to generate new images based on style-transfer and other techniques. An artist at this level of programming skill can also write scripts to programmatically download images from the web that meet specific textual criteria, e.g., “watercolors of pink roses.” 

Building an original machine learning application requires great resources and advanced computational and programming skills. The artist Refik Anadol, in his talk at the Institute of Fine Arts in New York City on June 3, 2024, said that it can take over six months of teamwork at his studio to compile data and build the application for a work such as Unsupervised, which was exhibited at the Museum of Modern Art in New York City.[3] Managing a team to retrieve and prepare data sets, as well as collaborating with programmers to run and train machine learning models, requires extensive studio resources including hardware for data storage and processing, bespoke software that addresses the artist’s vision, and a staff with appropriate expertise. 

Each of these approaches brings up a specific set of questions regarding acquisition practices, documentation practices, preparation for future re-exhibition, and other conservation concerns. Answering these and other questions, focusing on the collaboration between institutions and collectors with artists and engineers, leads to conservation strategies for these fragile and complex artworks, as artists continue to explore the use of machine learning as an artistic medium.

[1] https://bitforms.art/exhibition/dall%C2%B7e-artificial-imagination/ 

[2] https://whitney.org/exhibitions/xhairymutantx

[3] https://www.moma.org/calendar/exhibitions/5535
Speakers
avatar for Deena Engel

Deena Engel

Clinical Professor Emerita, New York University
Deena Engel is Clinical Professor Emerita in the Department of Computer Science at the Courant Institute of Mathematical Sciences at New York University. Professor Engel conducts research on contemporary art, specifically on the conservation and theory of computer-based art. She is... Read More →
Authors
avatar for Deena Engel

Deena Engel

Clinical Professor Emerita, New York University
Deena Engel is Clinical Professor Emerita in the Department of Computer Science at the Courant Institute of Mathematical Sciences at New York University. Professor Engel conducts research on contemporary art, specifically on the conservation and theory of computer-based art. She is... Read More →
Thursday May 29, 2025 2:30pm - 3:00pm CDT
Hyatt Regency Minneapolis

2:30pm CDT

(Objects) A Sterling Conservation Project: Preparing 1200 Pieces of Gorham Silver for Exhibition and Travel
Thursday May 29, 2025 2:30pm - 3:00pm CDT
Charged with preparing for the first comprehensive exhibition of the Gorham Collection of American silver since 1984, the Rhode Island School of Design (RISD) museum embarked on a volunteer-based “mass” conservation project. This Decorative Arts collectionis comprised of over 2,000 pieces and represents the largest holdings of Gorham in any museum collection. Dating from 1831-1981, the Gorham silver manufacturing company from Providence, Rhode Island, grew to be a substantial player in both the commercial market as well as the innovative art wares category. As theGorham Manufacturing Companyand the RISD Museum share the same town of origin, this particular conservation project resonated with much of the local community in a variety of unique ways. Three years in advance of the opening of the 2019 exhibition“Designing Innovation: The Gorham Manufacturing Company 1850-1970”, the cleaning, polishing and stabilizing of the silver commenced. As the quantity of sterling silver objects proposed for display numbered 1250, an equally large number of vetted, and trainable, volunteers was needed to undertake such an ambitious conservation project. This conservation project ultimately involved managing 90 community and student volunteers. As Providence is comprised of many institutions of higher learning, a significant level of student participation could be incorporated into this hands-on project. A short video (Silver Linings, www.risdmuseum.org) was created mid-way through this project to highlight five particular students, each traveling on a different educational path, who chose to dedicate their unstructured time to this collaborative project.“Designing Innovation: The Gorham Manufacturing Company 1850-1970”was designed as a traveling exhibition. By harnessing the talent of graduate level students in theJewelry + Metalsmithing Department at RISD,an illustrated visual glossary for condition reporting was created which proved to be a unique and symbiotic learning opportunity for both the conservator and young, emerging fine art students. This illustrated silver digital reference was collaboratively further refined in tandem with the museum’s registration department so that all of the terminology was composed of well-defined and non-ambiguous definitions to avoid any potential misinterpretation of condition issues during the duration of the exhibition. An additional academic opportunity presented itself for a capstone senior thesis project, focusing on a proprietary conservation material, was also another symbiotic educational oppportunity for reciprocal learning that benefited both the student and the museum.A highly collaborative project, the synergy created by a museum conservator working with a wide range of community volunteers was mutually beneficial in many creative ways. This paper will examine the ways in which a complex conservation project with a limited budget and staff can be organized and managed. Discussion will include the many creative interactions that resulted from the fusion of individuals with wide-ranging expertise from the Providence community. Creating a symbiotic working environment in which 90 untrained conservation volunteers could be identified and retained will be explored. Most importantly, the management of this conservation project required critical focus on training non-conservation professionals to use conservation protocols which were straightforward in interpretation and application.
Speakers
avatar for Ingrid A. Neuman

Ingrid A. Neuman

Senior Conservator, Rhode Island School of Design Museum
Ingrid A. Neuman is currently the Senior Conservator at the RISD Museum. She specializes in the care of three-dimensional objects. In addition to her responsibilities at the RISD Museum, Ingrid teaches a Use and Sustainability of Artist Materials undergraduate course at RISD as well... Read More →
Authors
avatar for Ingrid A. Neuman

Ingrid A. Neuman

Senior Conservator, Rhode Island School of Design Museum
Ingrid A. Neuman is currently the Senior Conservator at the RISD Museum. She specializes in the care of three-dimensional objects. In addition to her responsibilities at the RISD Museum, Ingrid teaches a Use and Sustainability of Artist Materials undergraduate course at RISD as well... Read More →
Thursday May 29, 2025 2:30pm - 3:00pm CDT
Hyatt Regency Minneapolis

2:30pm CDT

(Paintings) “It’s the small pieces that make the big picture”: The structural treatment of An Allegory of the Tudor Succession
Thursday May 29, 2025 2:30pm - 3:00pm CDT
The Panel Studio at The Metropolitan Museum of Art and the Yale Center for British Art (YCBA) have been collaborating on the treatment of the YCBA’s only painted depiction of the Tudor monarchs—An Allegory of the Tudor Succession (ca. 1590) by an unknown English artist. The painting’s large size (four by six feet) and the complexity of issues in its Baltic oak support required specialized structural treatment that, in the United States, is only currently available at The Met. This paper focuses on the methodology of the structural treatment and what was learned about the painting’s original construction and previous restorations.

 

An Allegory was taken off view in 2022 so that YCBA conservators could examine it using noninvasive techniques including microscopy, X-radiography, ultraviolet and infrared imaging, and x-ray fluorescence (XRF) scanning. The process revealed detailed information about the paint layers as well as the degree to which the painting had been previously restored. Dendrochronology was undertaken on the panel support to answer questions about two boards that had previously been cut across the grain, to the left of the figure of Elizabeth I. The evidence suggested that the tenting paint, lifting fills, and misalignment in the composition were related to issues in the wood support.




The painting was moved to The Metropolitan Museum of Art's Panel Painting Studio in 2023. Previous structural restorations were carefully reversed. This included removal of modern battens glued over the joins—which had caused splits and disjoins in the oak support, removal of thick layers of dark shellac using solvent gels, and separation of the five boards plus the two fragments that had been cut apart previously. Once separated, more than fifteen linear feet of splits were repaired using V-shaped oak wedges, and almost fifty feet of gluing faces were cleaned and prepared for rejoining. Each rejoin required many hours of careful fitting and adjusting to perfect the surface level and create a continuous surface conformation. Once the choreography required to achieve this was perfected, it was practiced numerous times so rejoining could be done in under 20 minutes—the working time for the adhesive. The area where the two boards had to be butt-joined, and four corners leveled, was particularly complicated. On the reverse, where the original wood had been cut away to receive modern battens in the early twentieth century, aged oak was cut to infill these losses and shaped to follow the original tool marks still present. Finally, a custom curved strainer was built to match the original stepped construction on the back, employing spiral spring tensioners to provide tailored support.

 

This collaboration highlights the complexity of issues when undertaking the treatment of large, thin panel paintings, and current methods of structural conservation, which continue to evolve. The successful treatment of An Allegory of Tudor Succession depended on numerous discussions and in-person visits between Kristin, Jess, and Alan, and the efforts of both institutions' communications teams to document and share the treatment.
Speakers
avatar for Kristin Holder

Kristin Holder

Assistant Conservator, The Metropolitan Museum of Art
Kristin Holder specializes in the structural conservation of panel paintings as an Assistant Conservator at The Metropolitan Museum of Art. Kristin received a BFA in painting from the University of Washington, an MFA in painting from the American University, and an MS/MA in Conservation... Read More →
Authors
avatar for Kristin Holder

Kristin Holder

Assistant Conservator, The Metropolitan Museum of Art
Kristin Holder specializes in the structural conservation of panel paintings as an Assistant Conservator at The Metropolitan Museum of Art. Kristin received a BFA in painting from the University of Washington, an MFA in painting from the American University, and an MS/MA in Conservation... Read More →
avatar for M. Alan Miller

M. Alan Miller

Conservator, The Metropolitan Museum of Art
Alan Miller specializes in the structural conservation of panel paintings. He received an MA in art history from the University of Washington and a postgraduate diploma in the conservation of easel paintings from the Courtauld Institute of Art. Alan participated in the structural... Read More →
Thursday May 29, 2025 2:30pm - 3:00pm CDT
Hyatt Regency Minneapolis

2:30pm CDT

(Photographic Materials) “Lights on Vivex prints!” Raman identification and microfade testing of coloring materials
Thursday May 29, 2025 2:30pm - 3:00pm CDT
Vivex prints were initiated in 1928 by Color Photographs Limited (CPL, London) as a modified version of Carbro printing that was the dominant process in the 1930s for advertising and retail fashion. Vivex prints were produced in an industrial manner, using a standardized, mechanized protocol. It was the first laboratory to offer a color printing service to professional photographers. Fully operational in 1929, CPL produced several thousand prints in a ten years laps time, becoming the most widely used and reliable printing service in the UK. Despite being a cost-efficient company, CPL closed in 1939, with the beginning of World War II. 

The Vivex process uses three separation negatives created during shooting, using a one-shot camera or a Vivex repeating back. The process produces – in 80 steps – a pigmentary trichromatic print from the successive transfers of three primary images (yellow, magenta, cyan) inscribed in a pigmented gelatin relief. The colored carbon tissues used by CPL for printing were likely purchased from Autotype Company, based in London as well. 

Five Vivex color photographs by Egidio Scaioni, created between 1933 and 1939 and held at the Musée de la Mode de la Ville de Paris, Palais Galliera, were studied. The conservation state of these prints, and an advanced conservation project - as part of Loys Boivin's Master thesis at Institut National du Patrimoine - have triggered the need for analyses to better understand the materiality of these little-known objects.  

Fortunately, all five prints showed accessible margins for each colored layer. Thus, non-invasive XRF analyses were carried out in these areas to identify the pigments used. The cyan layer showed the presence of iron, evidence of the use of Prussian blue. Surprisingly, the yellow and magenta layers did not show any elements related to the presence of pigments. Samples were taken from lacunar areas in the margins of one print for additional investigations using Raman spectroscopy. The yellow sample showed a signal specific to Pigment Yellow 4 of the Color Index (C.I. 11665) or Hansa Yellow. The magenta sample showed an intense signal with multiple bands – likely an organic pigment – but has not yet been attributed due to the lack of published databases. 

The discovery of the synthetic organic nature of these pigments instead of the mineral pigments traditionally used for historical pigment prints raised doubts about the light-fastness of these objects. Microfading tests were performed on the colored margins of three prints: all layers are highly sensitive, despite a slightly more stable yellow layer. 

The industrial context of manufacturing might have guided the choice of new components, with the great color rendering required for the fleeting advertising and fashion fields, but less durable in time. These strategic choices are most likely part of a global context of industrial development, with massive production demand and high profitability. This study opens up new insights into the light sensitivity of pigment color prints, and the development of new approaches to exhibiting these rare historical prints.
Speakers
avatar for Céline Daher

Céline Daher

Conservation Scientist, Centre de Recherche sur la Conservation (CNRS-MNHN-Ministère de la Culture)
Céline Daher has a PhD in analytical chemistry, and after several post-doctorates in museum institutions and research laboratories, she has been a research engineer at the Centre de Recherche sur la Conservation (CNRS - MNHN - Ministère de la Culture) since 2023. She is part of... Read More →
avatar for Loys Boivin

Loys Boivin

Conservator, Atelier de Restauration et de Conservation des Photographies
Authors
avatar for Céline Daher

Céline Daher

Conservation Scientist, Centre de Recherche sur la Conservation (CNRS-MNHN-Ministère de la Culture)
Céline Daher has a PhD in analytical chemistry, and after several post-doctorates in museum institutions and research laboratories, she has been a research engineer at the Centre de Recherche sur la Conservation (CNRS - MNHN - Ministère de la Culture) since 2023. She is part of... Read More →
avatar for Loys Boivin

Loys Boivin

Conservator, Atelier de Restauration et de Conservation des Photographies
BL

Bruno Le Namouric

Conservator, Atelier de Restauration et de Conservation des Photographies
CR

Chloé Ranchoux

Research Engineer, Institut National du Patrimoine, département des restaurateurs
GQ

Gaël Quintric

Conservator of Photographs, ABACA-Conservation Restauration
JG

Jean-Paul Gandolfo

Independent Researcher
Thursday May 29, 2025 2:30pm - 3:00pm CDT
Hyatt Regency Minneapolis

2:30pm CDT

(Preventive Care) Van Gogh in motion: Safeguarding lined and unlined Van Gogh paintings from vibration and mechanical shock during transport
Thursday May 29, 2025 2:30pm - 3:00pm CDT
In 2023 a major exhibition about Vincent van Gogh (1853-1890) in Auvers was held at the Van Gogh Museum in Amsterdam in collaboration with the Musée d’Orsay in Paris, the second venue for this show. A significant exhibition since it was the first to be devoted to Van Gogh’s final months, bringing together works from all over the world, some of which had never before been shown at the same time. The question arose if several works of the Van Gogh Museum, which due to their fragility were not allowed to travel, could be transferred to Paris for this unique occasion. There were serious concerns about the impact of shock and vibrations during transport on two paintings in particular, Wheatfield with Crows and Wheatfield under Thunderclouds, which suffered from heavily cracked paint layers and poor paint adherence. When the strain levels caused by transport exceed the elasticity limits of the canvas and paint layers, they can inflict or aggravate material changes such as cracking and delamination (Kracht 2011: 51-53), thus posing a great risk for those paintings. Reducing the excitation levels is therefore crucial. 

This research, which builds strongly on the experience gained from an in-depth study of the vibration behavior of selected Van Gogh paintings in the Kröller-Müller Museum, Otterlo (Bisschoff et al. 2023), explores the vibration behavior of the wax-resin lined Wheatfield with Crows and Wheatfield under Thunderclouds. The panoramic, atypical format of these paintings (ca 50 x 100 cm height by width), which differs from the paintings studied in the Kröller-Müller Museum, and the permanent deformations in their support caused by lining are factors that contribute to their fragility. To establish the general difference in vibration behaviour between wax-resin lined, loose-lined and unlined Van Gogh paintings, the vibration response of View on Auvers, which has a loose-lining, and Garden of Daubigny, an unlined painting, was also investigated. The mechanical behavior of the paintings is explained in relation to their condition, conservation history and framing, the combination of which accounts for the paintings’ variable, non-linear vibration behavior. To achieve a more complete assessment of the transportation risk, not only the characteristic vibration modes of the paintings were investigated, as was done in the Kröller-Müller study, but their wave propagation behavior was examined as well. 

By combining an improved backing-board and framing construction with specific transport conditions, the mechanical stress in the two Van Gogh paintings could be significantly reduced during transport. A tailored method for transporting these fragile paintings is presented, while the possibility of its application to other paintings of the Van Gogh Museum collection is also discussed. In this research an ansatz is proposed to quantitatively assess the risk of vibration during transport. However, the results of this study should not be regarded as a formula or justification for sending paintings on loan that are too fragile to travel. Yet the presented measures of improvement can certainly be considered as a means to minimize the impact of shock and vibration when transport cannot be avoided. 


Kracht, K. Untersuchung des Schwingungsverhaltens von Ölgemälden in Abhängigkeit der Alterung. Dissertation at TU Berlin published at Shaker Verlag, 2011: pp. 51-53. 
 
Bisschoff, M., Leeuwestein, M., Kracht, K. Optimising the protection of the Kröller-Müller Museum’s wax-resin-lined van Gogh paintings from shocks and vibrations in transit. ICOM-CC Valencia 2023, 20th Triennial Conference.
Speakers
avatar for Saskia van Oudheusden

Saskia van Oudheusden

Paintings Conservator, Van Gogh Museum Amsterdam
Saskia van Oudheusden is a paintings conservator at the Van Gogh Museum since 2017. She obtained a MA in Cultural Studies at the Radboud University Nijmegen in 2010 and a MA in Conservation and Restoration of Cultural Heritage at the University of Amsterdam in 2012, specializing in... Read More →
Authors
avatar for Saskia van Oudheusden

Saskia van Oudheusden

Paintings Conservator, Van Gogh Museum Amsterdam
Saskia van Oudheusden is a paintings conservator at the Van Gogh Museum since 2017. She obtained a MA in Cultural Studies at the Radboud University Nijmegen in 2010 and a MA in Conservation and Restoration of Cultural Heritage at the University of Amsterdam in 2012, specializing in... Read More →
avatar for Kerstin Kracht

Kerstin Kracht

Senior Researcher and Lecturer, Technische Universität Berlin
Kerstin Kracht is a vibration technology and continuum mechanics engineer who has applied and shared her expertise in vibration and shock prevention within the field of art and cultural heritage preservation for the last twenty years. Kerstin studied physical engineering and completed... Read More →
Thursday May 29, 2025 2:30pm - 3:00pm CDT
Hyatt Regency Minneapolis

2:30pm CDT

(Research & Technical Studies) Testing for lead on sculpture: defining useful thresholds in a liability- and safety-minded America
Thursday May 29, 2025 2:30pm - 3:00pm CDT
Lead and lead contaminated materials can be a danger in art. It can be obvious or hidden, for example: lead-containing primers, pigments, sculpture substrates, corrosion products, pigments, or art that contains contaminated synthetics. Identifying lead-containing materials can significantly change the treatment strategy, require additional safety precautions, and increase costs. However, even with the commercial availability of highly sensitive spot testing kits, determining if the artwork poses a “real” risk is not a straightforward process. Conservators at Monumenta and MoMA recently found themselves in a confusing world of false positives, opaque and uncooperative technicians at testing laboratories, and misleading thresholds. It suddenly became hard to answer the simple question “does the sculpture contain an unsafe level of lead?” using readily available testing materials. 



Lead spot-testing kits available for home use range widely in precision, accuracy, and sensitivity, and are marketed for a variety of use cases. Scant comprehensive research available on the efficacy and suitability of commercially available lead spot-testing kits for conservation purposes further exacerbates the challenge of parsing out the differences between tests, making it difficult for conservators to make informed testing decisions. Further uncertainty follows because many laboratory test results offer only "presence or absence" reporting; the identification of lead does not necessarily indicate unsafe levels of lead, only that lead exists in the sample. Additionally, Federal and State standards for the total amount of unsafe lead in parts per million are inconsistent and not well delineated compared to contamination from the environment or another source. Commercial environmental testing solutions also do not provide the interpretation of test results owing to liability concerns. 



In response to this need for a reliable lead-testing practice, Conservators aim to develop a lead-testing protocol that includes both interpretation of in-the-field spot testing followed by comprehensive (qualitative) analytical testing using environmental laboratories all to ascertain a creditable risk. This work includes evaluating commercially available spot testing kits for their usefulness, surveying state and federal thresholds for lead-containing coatings, cultivating relationships with toxicologists, and developing strategies to communicate with environmental testing laboratories that are reluctant to interpret data for liability reasons. A summary of research to date will be presented, which represents only the beginning of much-needed research on this crucially important safety topic.
Speakers
avatar for Sarah Montonchaikul

Sarah Montonchaikul

Assistant Objects Conservator, Monumenta Art Conservation and Finishing
Sarah Montonchaikul is the Assistant Conservator at Monumenta Art Conservation and Finishing. She earned an M.S. in the conservation of historic and artistic works and an M.A. in art history from the Conservation Center at the Institute of Fine Arts (New York University). Sarah held... Read More →
ER

Ellen Rand

Conservation Specialist & Co-Owner, Monumenta Art Conservation and Finishing LLC
Ellen Rand, co-owner and Conservation Specialist of Monumenta Art Conservation & Finishing, started her career fabricating sculpture at art foundries; her extensive experience welding, chasing, patinating, and her knowledge of metal production techniques, including casting, is invaluable... Read More →
Authors
avatar for Sarah Montonchaikul

Sarah Montonchaikul

Assistant Objects Conservator, Monumenta Art Conservation and Finishing
Sarah Montonchaikul is the Assistant Conservator at Monumenta Art Conservation and Finishing. She earned an M.S. in the conservation of historic and artistic works and an M.A. in art history from the Conservation Center at the Institute of Fine Arts (New York University). Sarah held... Read More →
ER

Ellen Rand

Conservation Specialist & Co-Owner, Monumenta Art Conservation and Finishing LLC
Ellen Rand, co-owner and Conservation Specialist of Monumenta Art Conservation & Finishing, started her career fabricating sculpture at art foundries; her extensive experience welding, chasing, patinating, and her knowledge of metal production techniques, including casting, is invaluable... Read More →
avatar for Lynda Zycherman

Lynda Zycherman

Conservator of Sculpture, Museum of Modern Art
Lynda Zycherman is Conservator of Sculpture at the Museum of Modern Art. She received a B.A. from the City College of New York, an M.A. in Art History from the Institute of Fine Arts, New York University, and an Advanced Certificate in Art Conservation from the Conservation Center... Read More →
avatar for Soon Kai Poh

Soon Kai Poh

Conservator, Museum of Modern Art
Soon Kai Poh is a conservator based in New York City. He holds a B.A. in Studio Art and Chemistry from Carleton College, and received a M.A. in Art History and M.S. in Art Conservation from the Conservation Center, Institute of Fine Arts, New York University. He has held postgraduate... Read More →
Thursday May 29, 2025 2:30pm - 3:00pm CDT
Hyatt Regency Minneapolis

2:30pm CDT

(Textiles) If you Give a Mouse a Cookie: The use of Solvent Gels, Painted Overlays, and a Heating Pad in the Treatment of a Crazy Quilt
Thursday May 29, 2025 2:30pm - 3:00pm CDT
An unfinished crazy quilt, dated 1886, by the Ladies of the Presbyterian Missionary & Aid Society in Reedsburg, Wisconsin was slated for rotation in August 2024 for the Art of the Quilter exhibit at the Art Museums of Colonial Williamsburg. Crazy quilts are a class defined by asymmetry and Victorian fancywork that reached peak popularity at the end of the nineteenth century. They use an abundance of different fabrics, particularly weighted silks, which are notorious for their propensity to split and shatter over time. When combined with a smorgasbord of decorative techniques, such as the painting, stuffed-work, ribbon-work, stamped inscriptions, metallic thread, applique, and plentiful embroidery used in this example, a plethora of unique conservation challenges develop all on the same quilt. These condition issues required several novel solutions, including the use of painted overlays, solvent gels, and gentle adhesive reactivation with a heating pad.




Painted overlays were used to stabilize patches of split and shattered silks. The patches were irregular in shape and neighbored by a variety of colors. Overlays of nylon bobbinet were painted with PROfab textile paints and Golden Artist Colors acrylic paints to match color transitions and fabric patterns. This allowed the overlays to be secured in more stable neighboring patches and to match, rather than obscure, pattern elements.




Solvent gels were utilized in stain reduction for an area in which a small L-shaped tear had formed. The stain was dark and stiff in character and tests indicated that it was soluble in acetone. Agarose gels immersed in acetone for 24 hours were tested at 2%, 3%, 4%, and 5% w/v concentrations on mockups. Concerns about solvent spread and tideline formation also led to experiments with a dabbing technique. Testing directly on the stain with 4% w/v gels resulted in significant stain reduction and a yellow tone visible on the spent gels. However, when treatment proceeded with new 4% w/v gels, the same results could not be achieved. The issue could be attributed to a change in rheology caused by longer acetone immersion and treatment proceeded with 3% w/v gels instead. The dabbing technique was employed with some success in areas with limited access. 




A heating pad was used to reactivate the adhesive treatment for a cracked and brittle painted flower on a velvet ground. A large tear had formed through the center of the painted flower, accompanied by a small loss. An adhesive approach was selected due to the brittle nature of the area; however, reactivation by solvent or a heat spatula carried chemical or mechanical risks for the paint. Aiming to utilize its tacky nature as a pressure-sensitive solution, undiluted Lascaux 360 HV was selected as the adhesive and applied to a heavy-weight Japanese paper. Unfortunately, testing indicated that contact pressure alone was unlikely to result in a strong enough bond. A consumer-grade heating pad, advertised to achieve up to 60°C (the activation temperature of Lascaux 360 HV is 50°C), was tested and employed for the treatment, resulting in a successful, though fragile bond.
Speakers
avatar for Michelle Leung

Michelle Leung

Textiles Intern, Colonial Williamsburg Foundation
Michelle Leung graduated from the University of Rhode Island in 2023 with a MS in Textiles, Fashion Merchandising and Design with a specialization in Historic Fashion and Textiles, Textile Conservation, and Cultural Analysis. Her thesis work is on Solvent Gels for Textile Conservation... Read More →
Authors
avatar for Michelle Leung

Michelle Leung

Textiles Intern, Colonial Williamsburg Foundation
Michelle Leung graduated from the University of Rhode Island in 2023 with a MS in Textiles, Fashion Merchandising and Design with a specialization in Historic Fashion and Textiles, Textile Conservation, and Cultural Analysis. Her thesis work is on Solvent Gels for Textile Conservation... Read More →
Thursday May 29, 2025 2:30pm - 3:00pm CDT
Hyatt Regency Minneapolis

3:00pm CDT

(Architecture) Bridging the Gap Between Real and Virtual: A Digital Interface for a Building Materials Collection
Thursday May 29, 2025 3:00pm - 3:30pm CDT
The Historic Building Materials Collection (HBMC) is a repository of material samples collected from historic buildings and sites around the world. It serves as a resource for architects, historians, conservators, and scholars seeking access to traditional and historic building materials, ranging from the vernacular to high-style structures, including archaeological sites. The collection’s core function is to facilitate direct access to physical material specimens and enable advanced analysis, such as cross-section and thin-section microscopy, providing critical insights into the materials' composition, structure, and history.

However, with the physical collection outgrowing its designated institutional space, the need for a more efficient, user-friendly way to access and manage these materials has become urgent. Handling these historic objects too frequently increases their risk of damage, and traditional archival methods do not provide the discoverability or ease of access required for research. This has driven the need to create a digital interface that offers scholars and visitors the ability to explore the collection by cross-referencing, reduce wear and tear from handling the physical specimens, and boost awareness and engagement with the collection to a larger audience.

The digital interface for the HBMC acts as a searchable and query-able repository, allowing users to navigate the collection through various filters, such as material composition, building or site, object type, or date range. This repository streamlines the process of discovery by enabling users to explore and gather relevant information without physically handling the objects. Each specimen within the collection is assigned a unique object ID that encodes its material composition, site of origin, and date of creation, a redundant step that protects the integrity of the collection against loss of data. In addition, the unique ID links the specimen it to its virtual record, which expands with a narrative of the object, as well as its inherent deterioration conditions, previous research done, and any associated objects.

In addition to making the research process more efficient, the digital interface serves as a preservation tool. By moving the initial task of discovery to a public website, it is expected an increased awareness of the collection while minimizing the frequency of physical handling of the samples. Users can access high-quality images, 3D scans, and detailed metadata of each object, and only request physical access once objects have been identified. This system of controlled access not only protects the specimens from potential damage but also supports long-term conservation efforts.

The digital repository will support embedding analytical data to common constituents found in historic building materials, such as particle size distribution of an aggregate or the molecular spectrum of a known pigment, providing scholars with relevant scientific data immediately.

By combining digital technology with traditional archival methodologies, this interface will not only prolong the physical preservation of the collection but also facilitate research in conservation, enhancing the study and understanding of historic building materials.
Speakers
avatar for Jose Hernandez

Jose Hernandez

Lab Manager, University of Pennsylvania
José currently serves as lab manager for the Architectural Conservation Lab, University of Pennsylvania. He completed his Master of Science degree in Historic Preservation from the University of Pennsylvania in 2022 with a concentration in architectural conservation. His thesis investigated... Read More →
Authors
avatar for Jose Hernandez

Jose Hernandez

Lab Manager, University of Pennsylvania
José currently serves as lab manager for the Architectural Conservation Lab, University of Pennsylvania. He completed his Master of Science degree in Historic Preservation from the University of Pennsylvania in 2022 with a concentration in architectural conservation. His thesis investigated... Read More →
Thursday May 29, 2025 3:00pm - 3:30pm CDT
Hyatt Regency Minneapolis

3:00pm CDT

(Book and Paper) Blueprint for Growth: A Journey of Architecture Designs
Thursday May 29, 2025 3:00pm - 3:30pm CDT
The National Library Board (NLB) and National Archives of Singapore (NAS), together with the Urban Redevelopment Agency, Singapore’s urban planning authority, embarked on an extensive 5-year architecture collecting project in 2023. The momentous effort primarily seeks to encapsulate the history of prominent architecture designs in Singapore. The paper-based items included sketches on translucent tracing and butter paper, building plans, watercolour presentations, diazo prints, and printed images on copier paper.

The conservators from Archives Conservation Lab (ACL) of NAS play an essential role in this cross-functional collaborative project. Two conservators were engaged to support this project in carrying out conservation treatments and re-housing of the plans, which numbered 75,000 pages in the first round of collecting. From conceptualizing the storage of the items given their large format, to formulating a decision-making matrix for conservation approaches, close consultations with the donors team who were in charge of the collecting was extremely important, particularly in setting up new workflows for this unique collection. A one-size-fits-all approach did not apply here as each donated box of plans came with different conditions and required customised attention. It was imperative to streamline decision-making and prioritise treatment and housing solutions for the collection that was coming to the lab in staggered bursts. Such efforts provided much clarity for conservators who were new to the profession as well as for our colleagues in the donors team so that subsequent batches of plans could be processed, conserved and housed efficiently, with purpose and confidence.

The initial tranche of this project also culminated in an exciting exhibition, the first of a planned few, ‘To Draw an Idea: Retracing the Designs of William Lim Associates – W Architects’ which exhibited over 550 multifarious design drawings covering 19 contemporary architectural projects from 1981 to 2015. ACL supported this exhibition by working closely with the curators from the planning and ideation, condition assessments and installation stages – all of which required innovative problem-solving. Every exhibition is different, and conservators increasingly must find a balance that works when working in unconventional exhibition spaces– without compromising the preservation needs of the items.

The Architecture Collection Project is an example that emphasises that the role of conservators today has transformed beyond simply providing one-off exhibition or conservation support. Collaboration with all stakeholders and partners means advocating for conservation principles, while balancing them sensibly with practicality and feasibility to ensure that objectives are met, and outcomes are achieved successfully for all groups involved. It sets the foundation for greater camaraderie among different functional groups and stakeholders, built on understanding, engagement and synergy.
Speakers
avatar for Tay Jam Meng

Tay Jam Meng

Conservator, National Library Board
Tay Jam Meng is a Conservator at the National Archives of Singapore (an institution of the National Library Board), overseeing Interventive and Preventive Conservation work for paper-based archival and library records. Jam Meng has over two decades of conservation experience in the... Read More →
avatar for Sanira Karim Gani

Sanira Karim Gani

Senior Conservator, National Library Board
Sanira Beevi is an Assistant Director/Senior Conservator with the National Archives of Singapore (part of the National Library Board), heading the Archives Conservation Lab. She oversees the conservation of paper-based library and archival records of historical and national significance... Read More →
Authors
avatar for Tay Jam Meng

Tay Jam Meng

Conservator, National Library Board
Tay Jam Meng is a Conservator at the National Archives of Singapore (an institution of the National Library Board), overseeing Interventive and Preventive Conservation work for paper-based archival and library records. Jam Meng has over two decades of conservation experience in the... Read More →
avatar for Sanira Karim Gani

Sanira Karim Gani

Senior Conservator, National Library Board
Sanira Beevi is an Assistant Director/Senior Conservator with the National Archives of Singapore (part of the National Library Board), heading the Archives Conservation Lab. She oversees the conservation of paper-based library and archival records of historical and national significance... Read More →
Thursday May 29, 2025 3:00pm - 3:30pm CDT
Hyatt Regency Minneapolis

3:00pm CDT

(Contemporary Art) Building collaborative networks of care for the conservation of Chryssa’s neon works
Thursday May 29, 2025 3:00pm - 3:30pm CDT
From static light sculptures to found material constructions, Greek-American artist Chryssa (1933-2013) wove neon tubing throughout her sculptural practice. Her ingenuity and craft produced a collection of ambitious and unique sculptures, teeming with experimentation in glass bending, neon color theory, scale, and display technology that integrated mechanical components and aging neon sign hardware with new advances in plastics into sculptural form. Inspired by the neon signs of New York, she transformed this high-voltage signmakers’ craft into an unprecedented body of sculpture and light art. 

A traveling exhibition of Chryssa’s works in 2023-24 necessitated a large campaign to restore her neon sculptures from the 1960s, the process of which posed a series of conservation challenges surrounding obsolescent technology, hard-to-find technical expertise, and strategies for how to care for sculpturally- and mechanically-complex light art. As the coordinating conservator for the three-venue exhibition, I was in a unique position of both participating in decision-making related to the exhibition organization and serving as a liaison to conservators and neon benders engaged by our lenders to help restore her work. 

In the case of Chryssa’s neons, the challenge of restoration was magnified by the lack of research on the artist, and her general exclusion from the art historical record prevented most institutions and collectors from acquiring more than a token few of her works. The general unfamiliarity with Chryssa, compounded with her not having a recognized estate or foundation acting on her behalf, left much of her work in disrepair in storage. In order to successfully bring her works together in a cohesive, operational, and unified manner, I found that I needed to build a collaborative network of care between art conservators, neon benders, registrars, and art prep teams. 

Successful strategies in building this network of care included connecting conservators treating similar condition issues for different lenders, sharing resources broadly across the team related to materials and construction, hosting a group call for conservators treating her work and neon benders to discuss condition issues and options, hosting a public panel discussion on the conservation of Chryssa's neon, and organizing an in-person Study Day at the second exhibition venue to share research, technical skill, and reflect on the conservation treatments we carried out. Together we were able to develop collective preservation strategies that will hopefully help inform the better understanding and future conservation of Chryssa’s work.
Speakers
avatar for Joy Bloser

Joy Bloser

Conservator, The Menil Collection
Joy Bloser is an associate objects conservator at The Menil Collection, Houston, where she specializes in the care of contemporary art and the treatment of polymeric materials. She earned her MS in Conservation and MA in Art History from The Institute of Fine Arts, NYU, and a BA in... Read More →
Authors
avatar for Joy Bloser

Joy Bloser

Conservator, The Menil Collection
Joy Bloser is an associate objects conservator at The Menil Collection, Houston, where she specializes in the care of contemporary art and the treatment of polymeric materials. She earned her MS in Conservation and MA in Art History from The Institute of Fine Arts, NYU, and a BA in... Read More →
Thursday May 29, 2025 3:00pm - 3:30pm CDT
Hyatt Regency Minneapolis

3:00pm CDT

(Electronic Media) Video Archives for Media Archaelogy: Steina Vasulka and Live A/V Processing in the 90s
Thursday May 29, 2025 3:00pm - 3:30pm CDT
As we consider new tools and technologies for working with the video signal, it can be interesting to look back at key periods of innovation for digital video editing and manipulation. Steina and Woody Vasulka are "pioneers" of video and new media art and technology who spent their careers exploring the innate potential of the signal and pushed for new tools to facilitate this exploration. Steina, in particular, was fascinated with advancements in real-time A/V processing for purposes of performances, interactivity, and immersive environments and worked with many engineers and software developers throughout the 90s to create and modify software for these purposes. In anticipation of an upcoming exhibit being organized by the MIT List Center, I have been going back into my days assisting the Vasulkas with their archive and exhuming rare videos documenting the development process for these tools which has led to further inquiry around what was not-yet possible to do with consumer-based open-source video tools from this time. This begs the question of what past efforts have been made to create artist-driven tools with an open-source ethos, the successes and failures of these efforts, and what archives of this content can do to better ensure these obscure and abstracted histories can be interwoven to form a more complete narrative around media histories.
Speakers
avatar for Joseph G Heinen Jr.

Joseph G Heinen Jr.

Digital Preservation Manager, Los Angeles County Museum of Art
Joey Heinen is a digital preservation and time-based media specialist, currently serving as Digital Preservation Manager in the Collection Information and Digital Assets Department and head of the Time Based Media Committee at the Los Angeles County Museum of Art. In this role he... Read More →
Authors
avatar for Joseph G Heinen Jr.

Joseph G Heinen Jr.

Digital Preservation Manager, Los Angeles County Museum of Art
Joey Heinen is a digital preservation and time-based media specialist, currently serving as Digital Preservation Manager in the Collection Information and Digital Assets Department and head of the Time Based Media Committee at the Los Angeles County Museum of Art. In this role he... Read More →
Thursday May 29, 2025 3:00pm - 3:30pm CDT
Hyatt Regency Minneapolis

3:00pm CDT

(Objects) Rediscovering and assembling painted wooden boxes from King Tutankhamun's collection: a collaborative approach
Thursday May 29, 2025 3:00pm - 3:30pm CDT
The collection of King Tutankhamun (18th Dynasty, 1347–1337 BCE) has fascinated scientists and the general public since the discovery of his spectacular tomb in 1922 by the archaeologist Howard Carter. After the opening of the tomb, Howard Carter mentioned that Tutankhamun's tomb was robbed and the robbers destroyed many objects during the robbery; at least two boxes found dismantled in the entrance debris seem to have been employed by the robbers to carry off their loot. Alfred Lucas completed the restoration of Tutankhamun's collection in 1932, subsequently transferring almost all of the Tutankhamun objects to the Egyptian Museum in Cairo. Only a few objects were kept in the Luxor museum storeroom. In recent years, the Grand Egyptian Museum's conservation center (GEM.CC) has been devoted to the transportation and conservation of Tutankhamun's collection to be exhibited at the new museum (GEM). This study presents the role of conservation along with the archaeological data and scientific investigation at GEM.CC in the rediscovery and assembly of some broken painted wooden boxes from Tutankhamun's tomb after 95 years of keeping these parts separately in different museums.

After surveying the wooden boxes of Tutankhamun to gather more information on these boxes as a first step in our study, the second step included imaging techniques and optical microscopy to gather more information and to provide evidence on the techniques of manufacture, woodworking and identification of wood species. In the third step of our work, hand-held X-ray fluorescence spectroscopy (XRF), X-ray diffraction (XRD), and Fourier transform infrared spectroscopy (FTIR) were applied to determine the chemical compositions of the materials used in preparatory layers and the pigments.

The results of the collaborative approach led to the exciting rediscovery of three wooden boxes from Tutankhamun's collection. The work team succeeded in the assembly of more than 96 wooden pieces (like puzzles), most surprisingly discovering that these broken parts were originally two wooden boxes. Moreover, the work team succeeded in rediscovering and assembling a complete wooden box belonging to the royal family of King Tutankhamun inscribed with the names of Akhenaton and Smenkh-ka-re, which came to light for the first time after many years of keeping its parts separately in different places.

The protocols and decision-making procedures during the collaboration of conservators, curators, and scientists were successfully effective not only in rediscovering and assembling three wooden boxes but also in their display method inside Tut Gallery at the Grand Egyptian Museum (GEM).
Speakers
avatar for Ahmed Abdrabou

Ahmed Abdrabou

Deputy Head of Wood Conservation Laboratory, Grand Egyptian Museum
Deputy head of Wood Conservation Lab and responsible for multispectral imaging at Grand Egyptian Museum
Authors
avatar for Ahmed Abdrabou

Ahmed Abdrabou

Deputy Head of Wood Conservation Laboratory, Grand Egyptian Museum
Deputy head of Wood Conservation Lab and responsible for multispectral imaging at Grand Egyptian Museum
AH

Ali Hussein

Grand Egyptian Museum
GS

Gilan Sultan

Grand Egyptian Museum
avatar for Medhat Abdallah

Medhat Abdallah

Director of Conservation, Storerooms-Saqqara
Prof. Medhat Abdallah Abdelhamid, Director of Conservation of Storerooms-Saqqara. He graduated from the Faculty of Archaeology in 1993 and completed a master's degree in conservation science in 2009. He completed a doctorate in conservation science in 2014 and has experience in wood... Read More →
Thursday May 29, 2025 3:00pm - 3:30pm CDT
Hyatt Regency Minneapolis

3:00pm CDT

(Paintings) Corneille de Lyon heart: technical studies of a late Renaissance portraitist and his workshop in France
Thursday May 29, 2025 3:00pm - 3:30pm CDT
Corneille de Lyon was one of the most prolific painters of 16th-century France, and yet very little is known about his life and oeuvre. Early references called him Corneille de La Haye (from The Hague, Netherlands), but he is documented already settled in Lyon by 1533. There, he established a successful workshop specializing in portraits of the noble, religious and bourgeois classes. As official painter to King Henri II of France (1519-1559), he maintained his workshop until his death in 1573, producing a wide corpus characterized by a naturalistic approach and the small format.

Though it is evident that there is a range of painting styles that falls under the attribution of Corneille, there are no extant signed works by the artist. Only one painting, Pierre Aymeric at the Louvre, has been firmly attributed to the artist thanks to an original inscription, but documentary evidence tells us that at least four people, including his daughter, painted in his workshop. Because of the subtle stylistic differences, it has thus far been impossible to understand which works belong to the painter himself and which belong to his assistants, students, or followers. This veil of mystery further prevents us from understanding the broader cultural context surrounding this artist, his patronage, workshop practice, and how his early life and artistic training in the Netherlands may have influenced French painting more broadly. 

 In her catalogue raisonné, Anne Dubois de Groër divides the oeuvre into what she calls “dark” and “light” paintings but states that without technical study, it is impossible to discern which artworks belong to each category. Very few technical studies of the artist have been conducted since De Groër’s publication in 1997. However, in the last few years, several works by Corneille have been treated and scientifically studied, providing an opportunity to start understanding the artistic process used by this artist and his workshop. This talk will share the early findings from such collaborations by comparing  Corneille’s technique and materials, across a number of paintings, including the Portrait of a Man from the National Gallery of Art of Washington DC and four portraits from the Indianapolis Museum of Art. 

Microscopy, X radiography, Infrared Reflectography, FORS, Infrared Spectroscopy, Reflectance Imaging Spectroscopy, GC-MS, XRF mapping and cross sections are the base for technical discoveries of this subject. The scientific analysis and historical reproduction underpinning this research consider the artworks’ materiality and allowed for the comprehensive study that will help art historians to better categorize the numerous portraits in the many collections in US and Europe. The presentation will also frame the painting production by Corneille in a larger artistic environment, related to Jean Clouet (about 1485/90- about 1540/41), Francois Clouet (before 1520 – 1572), Hans Holbein the Younger (1497/1498 – 1543) and Nicolas Hilliard (1547-1619). This collaborative project addresses the gap in scholarship, defines whether the distinction between master’s and assistant’s hand is a meaningful metric of quality, and explores how broader workshop production tells a story of equal importance to that of the master.
Speakers
CT

Carlandrea Tortorelli

Charles E. Culpeper Fellow in the Painting Conservation Department, National Gallery of Art
Carlandrea is the Charles E. Culpeper Fellow in the Painting Conservation Department at the National Gallery of Art. He studied at the Scuola di Alta Formazione e Studio of the Opificio delle Pietre Dure in Florence where he graduated in 2022, specializing in painting and wooden sculpture... Read More →
avatar for Roxane Sperber

Roxane Sperber

Clowes Associate Conservator of Paintings, Indianapolis Museum of Art at Newfields
Roxy Sperber is the Clowes Conservator of Paintings at the Indianapolis Museum of Art (IMA) at Newfields. She is a founding member an editor of Materia: Journal of Technical Art History and serves on the AIC Sustainability Committee. She completed a Postgraduate Diploma in the Conservation... Read More →
Authors
CT

Carlandrea Tortorelli

Charles E. Culpeper Fellow in the Painting Conservation Department, National Gallery of Art
Carlandrea is the Charles E. Culpeper Fellow in the Painting Conservation Department at the National Gallery of Art. He studied at the Scuola di Alta Formazione e Studio of the Opificio delle Pietre Dure in Florence where he graduated in 2022, specializing in painting and wooden sculpture... Read More →
avatar for John K. Delaney

John K. Delaney

Senior Imaging Scientist, National Gallery of Art
Dr. John K. Delaney is a senior imaging scientist within the Scientific Research Department of the National Gallery of Art, where he oversees the Chemical Imaging Laboratory. His research involves the development of multimodal imaging spectroscopic methods to help address conservation... Read More →
avatar for Laura Mosteller

Laura Mosteller

Conservation Specialist, Indianapolis Museum of Art at Newfields
Graduating from Indiana University, Bloomington, with a BA in fine art, Laura has been providing assistance to the Conservation Lab at Newfields since 2004 focusing on frame restoration and traditional gilding methods. She has participated in workshops at The Campbell Center for Historic... Read More →
avatar for Roxane Sperber

Roxane Sperber

Clowes Associate Conservator of Paintings, Indianapolis Museum of Art at Newfields
Roxy Sperber is the Clowes Conservator of Paintings at the Indianapolis Museum of Art (IMA) at Newfields. She is a founding member an editor of Materia: Journal of Technical Art History and serves on the AIC Sustainability Committee. She completed a Postgraduate Diploma in the Conservation... Read More →
SA

Sadie Arft

Curatorial Assistant for European Art and Works on Paper, Indianapolis Museum of Art at Newfields
Sadie Arft is the Curatorial Assistant for European Art and Works on Paper at the Indianapolis Museum of Art at Newfields. As an art historian, she specializes in Northern Renaissance art and is currently a PhD Candidate at the University of Kansas. Her areas of research often address... Read More →
Thursday May 29, 2025 3:00pm - 3:30pm CDT
Hyatt Regency Minneapolis

3:00pm CDT

(Preventive Care) A Multi-Strategy Approach to Preventive Conservation for historic wooden objects
Thursday May 29, 2025 3:00pm - 3:30pm CDT
The historic wooden columns currently on open display in the Victoria and Albert Museum (V&A) have been consistently shedding wood flakes throughout 2024. This ongoing deterioration has prompted the application of a targeted, multi-faceted strategy to identify the causes and mitigations made to combat them. For this organic material, the most likely potential agents of deterioration were identified as relative humidity fluctuations, pest activity, and physical force. To gain the clearest image of how and if these agents were impacting this object and a three pronged approach has been implemented.

The first prong of this strategy is analysing the existing data from the object environment, including environmental data and visitor number estimates. This will help identify trends in fluctuation of humidity, periods of increased physical force due to high footfall, and potential patterns in the degradation process.

The second prong employs Acoustic Emission (AE) analysis to monitor internal movement of the wooden columns and determine if movement is caused by humidity changes, pest activity, and external vibrations from urban traffic and gallery visitors. This analysis is combined with the innovative use of touch sensor alarms to alert when the columns are physically contacted by visitors, an area of concern that was raised during planning. The third prong uses Dynamic Vapour Sorption (DVS) analysis, conducted in partnership with English Heritage, to assess the structural integrity of the wood and its vulnerability to humidity variations.

There are multiple instances where these analyses are looking at the same agent of deterioration, for example all tests included consider humidity as a factor. This is not a redundancy in design, but an opportunity to consider factors that cause deterioration as a dynamic and interconnected system - rather than a roster of lone agents. This work aims to inform display strategy for similar heritage objects and to highlight the need for adaptive and interdisciplinary methodologies in preventive conservation.
Speakers
avatar for Hebe Halstead

Hebe Halstead

Preventive Conservator, Victoria and Albert Museum
Hebe Halstead is currently an Environmental Preventive Conservator at the Victoria and Albert Museum, London, UK. She has a MA in Preventive Conservation from Northumbria University, and has previous experience working on lighting and environmental policy at University of Cambridge... Read More →
avatar for Amanda Hahn

Amanda Hahn

Preventive Conservator, Victoria and Albert Museum
Amanda (Yeonjoo) Hahn holds a BA in Conservation Science from the Korea National University of Cultural Heritage and an MSc in Archaeological Science from University College London. She further specialized with an MA in Wall Paintings Conservation from the Courtauld Institute of Art... Read More →
Authors
avatar for Hebe Halstead

Hebe Halstead

Preventive Conservator, Victoria and Albert Museum
Hebe Halstead is currently an Environmental Preventive Conservator at the Victoria and Albert Museum, London, UK. She has a MA in Preventive Conservation from Northumbria University, and has previous experience working on lighting and environmental policy at University of Cambridge... Read More →
avatar for Amanda Hahn

Amanda Hahn

Preventive Conservator, Victoria and Albert Museum
Amanda (Yeonjoo) Hahn holds a BA in Conservation Science from the Korea National University of Cultural Heritage and an MSc in Archaeological Science from University College London. She further specialized with an MA in Wall Paintings Conservation from the Courtauld Institute of Art... Read More →
avatar for Antanas Melinis

Antanas Melinis

PhD Researcher, English Heritage
Antanas Melinis is a current PhD student at University College London and the conservation science fellow at English Heritage. He has a background in archaeology, archaeometry, and heritage science, with a specialisation on preventive glass conservation and materials analysis using... Read More →
avatar for David Thickett

David Thickett

Senior Conservation Scientist, English Heritage
Following a degree in natural sciences and two years of experience in industrial ceramics research, David Thickett joined the British Museum in 1990 with a specialism in preventive conservation and inorganic materials conservation research. Moving to English Heritage in 2003 as Senior... Read More →
Thursday May 29, 2025 3:00pm - 3:30pm CDT
Hyatt Regency Minneapolis

3:00pm CDT

(Research & Technical Studies) Museums and Zoos: A case study of an unusual collaboration for heritage science research and public outreach
Thursday May 29, 2025 3:00pm - 3:30pm CDT
Research into the Deathwatch Beetle infestation on HMS Victory led to a unique collaboration between The National Museum of the Royal Navy (NMRN), Cranfield University and The Zoological Society of London (ZSL): London Zoo. Deathwatch beetles are woodboring beetles that are pests to historic timber structures whose lifecycles can span anywhere between 1-13 years. Historic investigations into Deathwatch beetles made use of live cultures of the beetles for observation and experimentation. However, the cultures were never maintained beyond the course of each research period, much to the detriment of our understanding of the species.

A PhD research project was jointly funded by NMRN and Cranfield University to enhance understanding of the Deathwatch Beetle infestation on HMS Victory and explore methods of communicating complex conservation information to the public. During investigations into non-invasive methods of larval detection, it became clear that a live culture for study was sorely needed. There seemed little point, however, to starting a culture, only to have it die out once the research was concluded. The main issue is that the culture needs care and facilities to ensure it is maintained and monitored. Enter London Zoo.

London Zoo is equipped to maintain a culture long-term, and it fits within the normal remit and activities. The presence of specialist knowledge for the establishment and long-term development of the culture is essential. Having the culture in a central location with suitable resources and a vested interest in the long-term survival will enable the future research into Deathwatch Beetle activity and behaviour, but it can also serve as a means of public engagement with a wider audience. Remarkably little is known about the Deathwatch beetle, and knowledge gained from the culture would be useful for NMRN, but also other sites dealing with Deathwatch beetle infestations. Research and investigations could be conducted by students of Cranfield, strengthening existing, and establishing new, research ties. Displaying the culture, with explanations, to the public will bring heritage science research and HMS Victory to the attention of a wider audience that would not usually come across it.

For the Zoo, the use of a wood-boring beetle notorious for its cryptid nature to develop non-invasive means of detection, means that techniques and methods can be investigated and tested on a non-threatened species before being used to detect endangered species, like the Fregate Beetle. Wildlife and heritage conservation, and the science and research behind them, can greatly benefit each other.
Speakers
avatar for Cathryn Harvey

Cathryn Harvey

Phd Researcher, Cranfield University
Following an Archaeology BSc at the University of Durham, Cathryn undertook a Master's in Conservation of Archaeological and Museum Objects at the same university. As part of the degree, she completed a nine-month work placement at the Bevaringscenter Fyn, a commercial conservation... Read More →
Authors
avatar for Cathryn Harvey

Cathryn Harvey

Phd Researcher, Cranfield University
Following an Archaeology BSc at the University of Durham, Cathryn undertook a Master's in Conservation of Archaeological and Museum Objects at the same university. As part of the degree, she completed a nine-month work placement at the Bevaringscenter Fyn, a commercial conservation... Read More →
avatar for Diana Davis

Diana Davis

Head of Conservaiton, National Museum of the Royal Navy
Diana graduated with a BSc in Archaeology & Palaeoecology from Queen's University Belfast, following which she worked for several years in field archaeology. She specialised in landscape interpretation, impact assessment and historic map research, before completing a Masters in the... Read More →
FB

Fiona Brock

PhD Researcher, Cranfield University
Fiona graduated with a degree in chemistry from the University of Manchester before undertaking her PhD and post-doctoral research in biogeochemistry at the Universities of Bristol and Cardiff. She then joined the Research Laboratory for Archaeology at Oxford University, where she... Read More →
avatar for Paul Pearce-Kelley

Paul Pearce-Kelley

Senior Curator of Invertebrates and Fish, Zoological Society London
Paul is the Zoological Society of London’s Senior Curator of invertebrates and fish and has worked with the Society since 1982. Paul specialises in the development and management of species conservation breeding and reintroduction programmes with particular focus on ectotherms... Read More →
Thursday May 29, 2025 3:00pm - 3:30pm CDT
Hyatt Regency Minneapolis

3:00pm CDT

(Textiles) It Takes a Village: Collaborations as a Critical Element in the Development of Pesticide Safety Programs
Thursday May 29, 2025 3:00pm - 3:30pm CDT
The presence of pesticide residues in art historical collections has been researched for decades with increased activity in recent years as more museums are actively testing collections objects and sometimes working spaces. While much information has been shared on detection methods, there is less discussion of next steps, i.e., the development of safety programs to guide staff in how to safely interact with such collections. The George Washington University Museum and The Textile Museum rapidly accelerated assessment and response activities in this area in 2023. Object detection methods were standard (detection of inorganic pesticide residues via portable X-ray fluorescence spectroscopy). But unique collaborations and creative resource employment expanded the ability to test facilities for both inorganic and organic contaminants. Even more so, these collaborations aided the development of robust safety programs which employ industrial hygiene methods of mechanical and administrative controls. Partnering with safety professionals bolstered conservation staff’s operating ethos that testing data should drive any response. Personal protective equipment use was formalized and expanded, cleaning regimens were mechanized, signage and logs were used to underscore new training, barriers to compliance were removed, waste removal was formalized, industrial hygiene workflows were employed and new internal guiding documents were developed. Partnerships transformed this process: with industrial hygienists, government organizations, museum, and university colleagues. Collaboration was critical to advancing these efforts as existing industrial hygiene models could be leveraged rather than creating such programs from scratch.
Speakers
avatar for Maria Fusco

Maria Fusco

Chief Conservator, The George Washington University Museum and The Textile Museum
Maria Fusco is Chief Conservator and Margaret Wing Dodge Chair in Conservation at The George Washington University Museum and The Textile Museum and has worked at the museum since 2011. She trained at the Textile Conservation Centre in Winchester, England, and held roles in government... Read More →
Authors
avatar for Maria Fusco

Maria Fusco

Chief Conservator, The George Washington University Museum and The Textile Museum
Maria Fusco is Chief Conservator and Margaret Wing Dodge Chair in Conservation at The George Washington University Museum and The Textile Museum and has worked at the museum since 2011. She trained at the Textile Conservation Centre in Winchester, England, and held roles in government... Read More →
Thursday May 29, 2025 3:00pm - 3:30pm CDT
Hyatt Regency Minneapolis

3:00pm CDT

The Wayside: House of Authors in Concord, MA. Introduction to Conservation and Preservation Efforts for Framed Photographs on Display.
Thursday May 29, 2025 3:00pm - 3:30pm CDT
The Wayside, a historic home in Concord, Massachusetts, is renowned for being the residence of several prominent 19th-century authors, including Louisa May Alcott, Nathaniel Hawthorne, and Margaret Sidney (Harriet Lothrop). In 1965, the house became part of Minute Man National Historical Park, marking the first literary site acquired by the National Park Service.

This presentation will focus on the ongoing efforts to preserve and conserve the collection of photographs permanently displayed in the house.

The walls of The Wayside are adorned with artwork, documents, and family photographs, many of which have been on display since their original placement by the owners. In 2023, a project was launched to address the conservation of framed paper artifacts on display. A team of paper and photograph conservator, along with object conservators, working through CCI Industrial Services, LLC, was contracted by the National Park Service for this task. The conservation work took place at the Historic Architecture, Conservation, and Engineering Center in Lowell, MA.
This presentation will delve into the decision-making processes behind the conservation efforts, considering the unique qualities of the artwork, its contextual significance, and the specific requirements of preserving it within a historic house setting. The collaborative efforts between conservators, curators, and National Park Service Project Inspectors will be a key focus.
The aim of the talk is to introduce the collection and highlight the factors specific to The Wayside that influenced the conservation approach. The presentation will be accompanied by images of the house and examples of the treatments undertaken.

Speakers
avatar for Karina Beeman

Karina Beeman

CCI Paper and Photograph Conservator, National Park Service, Lowell, MA, USA
Karina Beeman is a CCI paper and photographs conservator on contract for the National Park Service. From 2008 to 2023, she worked at the Paul Messier Conservation Studio following her completion of the Advanced Residency Program in Photograph Conservation at the George Eastman House... Read More →
Thursday May 29, 2025 3:00pm - 3:30pm CDT
Hyatt Regency Minneapolis

3:30pm CDT

Afternoon Break in the Exhibit Hall
Thursday May 29, 2025 3:30pm - 4:00pm CDT
Thursday May 29, 2025 3:30pm - 4:00pm CDT
Hyatt Regency Minneapolis

4:00pm CDT

(Architecture) Partners in Preservation: The importance of collaboration during construction at the Lower East Side Tenement Museum
Thursday May 29, 2025 4:00pm - 4:30pm CDT
In preservation, where recreated historic interiors are a norm, we know nothing tells the story quite like the real thing. The Lower East Side Tenement Museum in New York City has recently completed a multi-year, $7 million capital project to make the building more energy efficient, upgrade its HVAC system, restore the exterior masonry, and add strengthening materials to make the building more structurally sound. Although the museum did add a recreated apartment, conservators spent over 12 months preserving the paint, plaster, and wallpaper of the original “ruin” apartments.

The Tenement Museum is a five-story brick building located in a neighborhood densely packed with tenements and factories and was historically a first home for those new to the United States. Between its construction in 1863 and the 1930s, immigrants from over 20 countries lived in the tiny apartments of 97 Orchard Street. Instead of making additional alterations to meet changing housing codes in 1935, the landlord chose to evict all the tenants and sealed off the upper floors, leaving them uninhabited until 1988 when the museum took over the building. As a result, these apartments became a time capsule of immigrant life in America. The museum is unique in both its interpretation of the building and its occupants over time as well as its treatment of the ruin apartments in a state of “arrested decay” with their peeling wallpaper, curled plaster, bare wood, and faded linoleum. In addition to retaining the authenticity of the apartments, retention of these finishes assists in telling the story of the people who lived there, including changes in aesthetic tastes over time.  

Conservation work began prior to construction to install protection around historic fabric in areas of selective demolition. As time and funds were limited, conservation treatments to each room of each apartment could not be performed. The conservator and museum worked together to prioritize rooms and apartments based on location, remaining historic fabric, and future programming needs. This resulted in conservation treatment being performed in ten of the fourteen apartments accessible to the public. The opening of floors, walls, and ceilings was required for the installation of structural I-beams and sistering joists. This required additional collaboration with the contractor to ensure the openings were created in locations that would have the least impact on the historic fabric. 

Visitors often remark that the ruin apartments are their favorite. In these spaces there is a direct visceral connection to the past: people lived in these rooms, walked these floors, and touched these walls. Retaining that connection is vital to the museum’s mission. 

This paper will discuss the importance of the collaboration between all parties involved in the project and will discuss some of the conservation challenges in stabilizing the ruin materials and making them safe for visitors while retaining the look of abandonment at the Tenement Museum.
Speakers
avatar for Stephanie Hoagland

Stephanie Hoagland

Principal, Jablonski Building Conservation, Inc.
Stephanie M. Hoagland is a Principal and Architectural Conservator with Jablonski Building Conservation Inc. where she’s been employed since 2003. Ms. Hoagland has worked on a variety of conservation projects throughout the United States and Canada including finishes investigations... Read More →
Authors
avatar for Stephanie Hoagland

Stephanie Hoagland

Principal, Jablonski Building Conservation, Inc.
Stephanie M. Hoagland is a Principal and Architectural Conservator with Jablonski Building Conservation Inc. where she’s been employed since 2003. Ms. Hoagland has worked on a variety of conservation projects throughout the United States and Canada including finishes investigations... Read More →
Thursday May 29, 2025 4:00pm - 4:30pm CDT
Hyatt Regency Minneapolis

4:00pm CDT

(Book and Paper) Expanding Access: Inclusive Conservation and Education Engagement at The UK National Archives
Thursday May 29, 2025 4:00pm - 4:30pm CDT
The Collection Care Department at The UK National Archives ensure the continued access to 11 million archival records. But the idea of ‘access’ within a heritage context is changing as organisations work to become equitable and inclusive spaces. As a result, our preservation decision making is changing with this, aided by a dedicated engagement team within the department. 

Historically, conservation was rarely at forefront of public or institutional view, and to our detriment, we were often viewed as a barrier to increased access. Over the last three years however, we have made a concentrated effort to shift this narrative towards one of partnerships and mutual benefit, innovative heritage science and conservation practice that has wide appeal, and collective responsibility to care for our collection.

This presentation will focus on a key area of our ongoing work – supporting increased engagement with school aged children and audiences with additional needs. Through several case studies we explore how we are trying to meet the needs of these audiences; increasing the reach of our work digitally as well as through onsite displays; and building deeper relationships through effective engagement activities based on the materiality of our collection and role of the conservator. These include:

* A collaboration with education researchers, teachers, museum education teams, and heritage scientists across the UK to align heritage science to the UK primary school science curricula. We investigated how heritage science can help to break down silos between the teaching of arts and sciences, creating curricula maps and lesson plans that can be led by non-specialist museum staff and teachers.
* A collaborative research project exploring how multisensory experiences can be used to access, engage with, and understand the materiality of archival collections. Through this already impactful pilot project we are now working with SEND specialists to centre materiality in our SEND education lessons; we are also working with our outreach team to deliver enriching activities for people who have dementia based around smell; we are collaborating with PurpleStars, a group of researchers with and without learning disabilities, to develop inclusive and empowering research practices based on materiality of our collection; as well as creating multisensory, inclusive displays.
* Our object lessons for ‘high use records’ used regularly by our Education team to approach holistic decision making for access. Here, we bring together multiple internal and external stakeholders to create audience driven decision making frameworks that not only support our conservation team’s work, but also accountability and responsibility across the organisation.
* A project to create lesson plans with increased tactile access for students who are partially sighted or blind. This novel project challenged our assumptions on how our records will be used. 

Each case study will include an overview of the projects, focusing on the collaborative approach of each, as well as their benefits and challenges. More broadly, the presentation will also reflect on how we navigate internal relationships within a large organisation with competing priorities to create these opportunities, and how we built processes to evaluate the impact of our engagement activities.
Speakers
avatar for Natalie Brown

Natalie Brown

Head of Audiences, The National Archives
For the past five years I have worked at The UK National Archives, most recently as the Head of Audiences in the Collection Care Department, where I lead the strategic development of our public, sector, education, and policy engagement programmes. I am also the co-convener of the... Read More →
Authors
avatar for Natalie Brown

Natalie Brown

Head of Audiences, The National Archives
For the past five years I have worked at The UK National Archives, most recently as the Head of Audiences in the Collection Care Department, where I lead the strategic development of our public, sector, education, and policy engagement programmes. I am also the co-convener of the... Read More →
SP

Sarah Petter

Senior Engagement Manager in Collection Care, The National Archives
I am a heritage professional with experience engaging audiences and working with museum and archival collections. I currently work at The National Archives as Senior Engagement Manager in Collection Care where I create and facilitate audience-led on-site and digital engagement to... Read More →
Thursday May 29, 2025 4:00pm - 4:30pm CDT
Hyatt Regency Minneapolis

4:00pm CDT

(Contemporary Art) In name only? Collecting and caring for non-delegated performance artworks
Thursday May 29, 2025 4:00pm - 4:30pm CDT
Artworks involving live performance are now a small but not uncommon feature of contemporary museum collections. Much ink has been spilled over the last two decades around how best to keep the liveness of these works accessible for future generations. The enactment of most, if not all, live performance artworks in museum collections is achieved through delegation, whereby (re-)performances are made possible by individuals following written specifications and/or through practices of body-to-body knowledge transmission between performers. Artworks whose live performance cannot be delegated to others (e.g. those that can only be performed by their creators) have instead largely entered collections in the form of their archival traces or "supplements" that serve to stand in for the performance in a display context: photographic and audiovisual documentation; props, leftovers, or relics presented as artefacts; or a combination thereof, at times becoming installations. Using the Irish Museum of Modern Art’s recent acquisition of several performance artworks by Northern Irish artist Sandra Johnston as a case study, this talk critically examines what it means to both collect and care for a category of art that has been excluded from museum collections and consideration by conservation discourses: that of non-delegated live performance.

The live enactment of Johnston’s performance artworks cannot be delegated to others. Her performance practice is deeply personal and improvisational, a method of haptic, object- and site-responsive inquiry she often carries out in “contested spaces,” confronting traumatic memory retained in objects and sites. While some of her works have been (re)materialised for exhibition purposes in displays of audiovisual documentation of her past performances, IMMA's acquisition is notable in that these works were not subjected to the "rewriting" (Hölling 2017) that often comes with the acquisition of complex contemporary artworks and tends to transfigure them into "durable and repeatable" (Laurenson & van Saaze 2014) collection objects. Several of the works that IMMA acquired were sparsely documented and were acquired without any expectation or agreement, written or verbal, that Johnston would perform them again. The potential for their live (re-)performance instead depends entirely on Johnston's future ability and willingness to do so. Some of these performances are so site- and context-specific it is uncertain if their (re-)performance is even possible. 

Eschewing an anti-institutional critique that there is no place for these works in museum collections (beyond in the form of their documentary traces), this talk considers the value and importance of institutional collecting of non-delegated performance artworks. It examines how “external dependency” can and should be released from its negative framing, and reimagines the role of the conservator in caring for artworks whose “means of production” (Lawson et. al 2023) cannot be acquired by the museum. Significantly, this talk considers how a methodology of attunement—in this case, responsive to the logics, principles, and specificities of Johnston's artistic practice—revealed how an institutional care for these works depends not only on what conservators and collection staff do but also on what we stop ourselves from habitually and mindlessly forcing or repeating.
Speakers
avatar for Brian Castriota

Brian Castriota

Lecturer, University College London
Dr Brian Castriota is a Glasgow-based researcher, educator, and conservator specialised in time-based media, contemporary art, and archaeological materials. He is Lecturer in Conservation of Contemporary Art and Media at University College London (2023–), Time-Based Media Conservator... Read More →
Authors
avatar for Brian Castriota

Brian Castriota

Lecturer, University College London
Dr Brian Castriota is a Glasgow-based researcher, educator, and conservator specialised in time-based media, contemporary art, and archaeological materials. He is Lecturer in Conservation of Contemporary Art and Media at University College London (2023–), Time-Based Media Conservator... Read More →
Thursday May 29, 2025 4:00pm - 4:30pm CDT
Hyatt Regency Minneapolis

4:00pm CDT

(Electronic Media) Pay No Attention to that Unit Behind the Curtain: Identification, Assessment, and Documentation of Control Systems
Thursday May 29, 2025 4:00pm - 4:30pm CDT
In this paper, we present recent collaborative work at Tate to advance the understanding and care of artworks incorporating control systems. Artworks can make use of dynamic elements which require management and coordination; for example, the dimming of lights, the driving of motors, or the coordination of multiple channels of audio or video. At the heart of such artworks are control systems: sets of components, typically involving programmed computer hardware, which choreograph the sequence of actions desired by the artist. While many of these technologies overlap with those used in software and computer-based art—a medium that has been a focus of research at Tate over the past decade—they differ in their reduced emphasis on material specificity and their tendency to remain inconspicuous when the artwork is displayed. In light of these differences, we identified control systems as a distinct challenge that would benefit from further research.

Building on our experiences in the conservation of software-based art, we examined a range of artworks where control systems play a critical role. Reflecting on both commonalities and unique attributes, this investigation led to the development of guidance designed to assist conservators at Tate, including:

* guidelines for identifying control systems, including common component types, and how they differ from software-based artworks;

* key considerations when condition checking and documenting control systems;

* measures to prepare for the future translation of control system functionality to new technologies, as a response to obsolescence.

We found that many principles applied to the conservation of software-based art remained relevant, but the relative importance of these shifted and certain activities (such as disk imaging) were less useful. Our findings placed particular emphasis on understanding the control sequence—the series of actions enacted by the control system. This entails a variable process of analysis and documentation which may require specialist expertise and provides the key to migrating the control system to new technologies in the future.

We have adopted the “control system” label as a pragmatic means of highlighting the conservation challenges associated with a distinct yet diverse group of artworks. While this has helped us advance our understanding, it is clear that this grouping is not homogeneous and we encountered artworks that defy categorisation. This illustrates the limitations of medium-based terminology and the evolving nature of artistic practices which will continue to transcend medium-led conservation approaches. It underscores a need for well-resourced, interdisciplinary conservation work at points of acquisition and display, and for research time to be integrated into these processes as we continue to learn. With control systems present in many collections, and potentially falling under the radar of time-based media conservation projects, our findings have broader implications. We hope this paper will spark a wider conversation and foreground the power of interdisciplinary collaboration to influence future care and preservation strategies for these artworks.

Keywords: Control systems, time-based media
Speakers
avatar for Daniella Briceño Villamil

Daniella Briceño Villamil

Graduate Fellow in Art Conservation, Glenstone
Daniella Briceño Villamil is a conservation fellow at Glenstone, specializing in contemporary and time-based media collections. She holds an MS degree from the Winterthur/University of Delaware Program in Art Conservation (WUDPAC). During her third year of study, she interned with... Read More →
avatar for Tom Ensom

Tom Ensom

Digital Conservator, Independent Conservator & Researcher
Dr. Tom Ensom is a freelance digital conservator. He works with those caring for complex digital media, particularly software-based art, to research, develop and implement strategies for its long-term preservation. In 2018 he completed his PhD, which developed strategies for the documentation... Read More →
Authors
avatar for Daniella Briceño Villamil

Daniella Briceño Villamil

Graduate Fellow in Art Conservation, Glenstone
Daniella Briceño Villamil is a conservation fellow at Glenstone, specializing in contemporary and time-based media collections. She holds an MS degree from the Winterthur/University of Delaware Program in Art Conservation (WUDPAC). During her third year of study, she interned with... Read More →
avatar for Tom Ensom

Tom Ensom

Digital Conservator, Independent Conservator & Researcher
Dr. Tom Ensom is a freelance digital conservator. He works with those caring for complex digital media, particularly software-based art, to research, develop and implement strategies for its long-term preservation. In 2018 he completed his PhD, which developed strategies for the documentation... Read More →
Thursday May 29, 2025 4:00pm - 4:30pm CDT
Hyatt Regency Minneapolis

4:00pm CDT

(Objects) Mighty Powder: Demonstrating that fumed silica increases the adhesive strength of Acryloid B-72
Thursday May 29, 2025 4:00pm - 4:30pm CDT
Since its introduction to the field of heritage conservation by Stephen Koob in 1986, Acryloid B-72 has been used extensively for coating, consolidating, and adhering a wide range of materials. Revisited in 2018 for the AIC Objects Specialty Group, the recommended formulations of Acryloid B-72 include small amounts (0.1 weight % or 1 teaspoon) of hydrophobic fumed silica. This addition is stated to improve rheological and working properties, such as flow, film formation, and evaporation rate. Fumed silica is a commercially produced, low density, high surface area particulate agglomerate of silica nanoparticles. The resin and fumed silica mixture is, therefore, a polymer-nanoparticle composite. Since the mid-1990’s research in polymer physics has demonstrated how adding tiny amounts of nanoparticles can cause large improvements in polymer properties resulting from the high interfacial area between polymer and nanoparticles. One of the characteristic features of polymer-nanoparticle composites is the increased strength imparted by very small amounts of nanoparticles. Research undertaken by the Physics Department and Carlos Museum at Emory University quantified the increase in strength relative to the amount of fumed silica in Acryloid B-72 mixtures.   Recalling Koob’s original tests with glass slides, we built an apparatus to measure the weight tolerance of joins made to glass rods with different formulations of Acryloid B-72 and fumed silica. The resulting data demonstrate the appreciable increase in strength, a near doubling, accomplished by adding fumed silica to the resin and suggest an optimal percentage for maximum strength. Further testing evaluated the sheer strength of joined ceramic sherds, comparing neat resin, Koob’s mixture, and the optimal percentage derived from strength testing. Practical application reflects the capacity to use lower resin concentrations, allowing better penetration into cracks and voids, while still accomplishing joint strength due to the behavior of the polymer-nanoparticle composite.

In addition to summarizing the strength testing results for B-72 and fumed silica mixtures, this presentation considers the collaboration between student, professor, and conservators that enabled the research. An undergraduate physics major undertook the strength testing as an honors thesis project. The research of the faculty advisor focuses on soft matter physics, including how interfaces between components in polymer systems affect the physical properties and system dynamics. Her research group of graduate and undergraduate students develops experimental methods to understand the behavior of polymers and study the effects of temperature, mechanical forces, and other influences, such as particle interfaces. Conservators at Emory University’s Michael C. Carlos Museum provided insight into field practice and offered input on experimental design. Conservators also evaluated the experimental results for their practical impact on application and use of the polymer-nanoparticle composites, conducting trials with mock-ups and artifacts. This sort of fundamental characterization of treatment materials can be difficult to accomplish in small conservation labs that are principally tasked with preventive collections care and exhibition-driven object interventions. Recognizing the opportunity of collaboration and developing the research as a student project are productive strategies. This project was also useful preparation for the student, who went on to pursue graduate work in materials science.
Speakers
avatar for Renée Stein

Renée Stein

Chief Conservator, Michael C. Carlos Museum - Emory University
Renée Stein is Director of Conservation at the Michael C. Carlos Museum at Emory University where she oversees the treatment, preventive care, and technical analysis of the Museum’s varied collections. She is Associate Teaching Professor in the Art History Department, offering... Read More →
Authors
avatar for Renée Stein

Renée Stein

Chief Conservator, Michael C. Carlos Museum - Emory University
Renée Stein is Director of Conservation at the Michael C. Carlos Museum at Emory University where she oversees the treatment, preventive care, and technical analysis of the Museum’s varied collections. She is Associate Teaching Professor in the Art History Department, offering... Read More →
avatar for Connie B. Roth

Connie B. Roth

Professor, Physics Department - Emory University
Connie B. Roth is a Professor in the Department of Physics at Emory University, currently serving as Chair of the department. She has PhD and MSc Physics degrees from the University of Guelph in Canada, and completed postdoctoral positions at Simon Frazier University and Northwestern... Read More →
avatar for Elly Stewart Davis

Elly Stewart Davis

Graduate Fellow (Class of 2024), Gilcrease Museum
Elly Stewart Davis is Objects Conservator at the Gilcrease Museum in Tulsa, Oklahoma. She holds a Master of Arts in Conservation of Art and Cultural Heritage and a Master of Science in Conservation Science and Imaging from Buffalo State University. She completed internships at the... Read More →
avatar for Olivia L. F. Boyd

Olivia L. F. Boyd

Materials Test Engineer, Commonwealth Fusion Systems
Oliva Boyd is a Materials Test Engineer at Commonwealth Fusion Systems in Boston, Massachusetts. She holds a Master of Science in Materials Science and Engineering from the University of Pennsylvania and a Bachelors of Science in Physics from Emory University. She is a member of Phi... Read More →
Thursday May 29, 2025 4:00pm - 4:30pm CDT
Hyatt Regency Minneapolis

4:00pm CDT

(Paintings) A Collaboration Between Two Private Practice Firms: The Conservation and Restoration of Noël Hallé’s Abraham and the Three Angels
Thursday May 29, 2025 4:00pm - 4:30pm CDT
This paper describes an exceptional collaboration between two private practice firms in the treatment of a large (90” x 104 ½”) canvas painting depicting Abraham and the Three Angels (1762) by the French painter, draughtsman and printmaker Noël Hallé (1711-1781). It was brought to Gianfranco Pocobene Studio in need of comprehensive structural treatment, cleaning and restoration. Remarkably, the painting had remained unlined for more than 260 years and was relatively untouched, but the canvas support was very loose, and it suffered from extensive craquelure, severely cupping paint, incipient paint loss and a badly repaired tear caked with a thick, lead white adhesive patch. An oxidized and yellowed varnish layer dulled the image but overall, the paint layers remained largely intact and well preserved.



The unique circumstance of having a large canvas that had remained unlined for more than 260 years initiated much discussion and consideration about the best course of treatment. Could the painting be treated without lining or did its condition in fact warrant a lining to ensure the long-term preservation of the painted image? Ultimately, the need to line the painting proved vital and while other lining methods such as a BEVA adhesive lining were explored, the decision was made to perform a traditional glue-paste lining which, which in this case it was decided, would best deal with the paint and canvas problems. This lining technique is rarely if ever executed in North America and so a treatment collaboration was struck between Gianfranco Pocobene Studio and ArtCare Conservation. The success of the lining procedure was made possible through considerable planning between the two firms and most importantly, its execution which was led by Oliver Watkiss, an expert in glue-paste lining techniques.



The design and fabrication of an aluminum Dutch stretcher (loom) to facilitate the lining procedure in collaboration with a local metal worker will also be explored. Furthermore, the project provided two conservation graduate summer interns with the opportunity to learn new techniques and actively participate in a large and complex painting conservation treatment.
Speakers
avatar for Gianfranco Pocobene

Gianfranco Pocobene

Principal & Senior Paintings Conservator, Gianfranco Pocobene Studio
Gianfranco is Principal of Gianfranco Pocobene Studio, a private practice specializing in the conservation of paintings and murals. He received his Master of Arts in Conservation (M.A.C.) from Queen’s University, Class of 1984. His forty years of experience include fifteen years... Read More →
avatar for Corrine Long

Corrine Long

Associate Paintings Conservator, Gianfranco Pocobene Studio, Inc.
Corrine Long received her Bachelor or Arts in Art History and Studio Art from the University of New Hampshire in 2012. She held a two-year internship with Gianfranco Pocobene Studio from 2013-2015 before working as a decorative paintings restorer at John Canning Studios where she... Read More →
Authors
avatar for Gianfranco Pocobene

Gianfranco Pocobene

Principal & Senior Paintings Conservator, Gianfranco Pocobene Studio
Gianfranco is Principal of Gianfranco Pocobene Studio, a private practice specializing in the conservation of paintings and murals. He received his Master of Arts in Conservation (M.A.C.) from Queen’s University, Class of 1984. His forty years of experience include fifteen years... Read More →
avatar for Bitzy Couling

Bitzy Couling

Paintings Conservator & Laboratory Analyst, ArtCare Conservation
Bitzy holds a Bachelor of Arts in Art History and Classical Studies, as well as a Master of Art Conservation from Queen’s University in Ontario. She completed a Painting Conservation Fellowship at The John & Mable Ringling Museum of Art in Florida and gained valuable experience... Read More →
avatar for Corrine Long

Corrine Long

Associate Paintings Conservator, Gianfranco Pocobene Studio, Inc.
Corrine Long received her Bachelor or Arts in Art History and Studio Art from the University of New Hampshire in 2012. She held a two-year internship with Gianfranco Pocobene Studio from 2013-2015 before working as a decorative paintings restorer at John Canning Studios where she... Read More →
avatar for Oliver Watkiss

Oliver Watkiss

CEO/Director, ArtCare Conservation
Oliver joined ArtCare in 2013 following a move to the USA from Wiltshire, England. Oliver’s exposure to art began as a boy in his father’s – one of the United Kingdom’s most respected structural conservators – studio. Today, Oliver operates as the CEO and Director of ArtCare... Read More →
Thursday May 29, 2025 4:00pm - 4:30pm CDT
Hyatt Regency Minneapolis

4:00pm CDT

(Photographic Materials) Handcrafted Preservation: Custom Storage Solutions for Photographs at the Archivo de la Memoria Trans Argentina
Thursday May 29, 2025 4:00pm - 4:30pm CDT
This presentation will discuss the work conducted at the Archivo de la Memoria Trans Argentina (AMT) regarding the design and creation of custom storage systems for photographic materials.

A unique aspect of the AMT is its management and operation by the trans community. Individuals over 50 years old, trained from the ground up, work with their own materials, handling both the digitization and conservation of the archive’s photographs and documents. This approach ensures that the preservation process is deeply connected to and reflective of the community.

The AMT preserves a diverse range of photographic formats and materials, including silver gelatin prints (DOP), chromogenic prints, dye diffusion transfers, and negatives and slides on flexible plastic supports like triacetate and polyester.

Given the challenges of obtaining conservation supplies in Argentina, we have developed bespoke storage systems tailored to the specific needs of our collection. These systems are carefully designed to address the preservation requirements of our photographs and documents.

Before developing these storage systems, we ensured that the collection was properly organized, conservation conditions were assessed, photographic processes were identified, and an appropriate storage environment was established. The primary purpose of our storage design is to act as a physical barrier against environmental contaminants, fluctuations in relative humidity (RH) and temperature, particle deposition, abrasion, and improper handling.

Since our archive does not yet have permanent environmental controls, we decided to create multiple levels of storage and avoid using adhesives or plastics. Instead, all storage systems are crafted from cellulose-based materials that meet the following criteria: smooth and soft surface, dimensional stability, flexibility, white with no dyes or pigments that could migrate, long-term durability and performance, acid-free, free of peroxides and sulfur compounds, lignin-free, and devoid of plasticizers, resins, or waxes.

Locally available materials meeting archival permanence standards were selected for our storage systems. In Argentina, medical-grade paper is commonly used for photographic materials due to its technical specifications, which confirm its suitability for archival preservation.

The design of our storage systems was informed by the working methodology and the way materials are accessed and consulted. Consequently, we have developed paper envelope models, machine-sewn without adhesives, and designed folded models for folders and boxes to house individual items and photo albums. To standardize our processes and train new team members, we have created instructional documents and templates for the production of these storage systems.

Additionally, we have been monitoring internal and external environmental conditions using a data logger to assess how these multiple layers of storage serve as buffers against external environmental fluctuations. This presentation will include preliminary results from this ongoing monitoring, providing insights into the effectiveness of our storage solutions in mitigating environmental impacts.
Speakers
avatar for Carolina Nastri

Carolina Nastri

Conservator, Archivo de la Memoria Trans Argentina
Carolina Nastri is master’s candidate in Conservation-Restoration of Artistic and Bibliographic Goods (EAyP-UNSAM) and holder of a degree in Conservation and Restoration of Cultural Goods (UMSA). She has completed specialized training in Electronic Document Management and Preservation... Read More →
Authors
avatar for Carolina Nastri

Carolina Nastri

Conservator, Archivo de la Memoria Trans Argentina
Carolina Nastri is master’s candidate in Conservation-Restoration of Artistic and Bibliographic Goods (EAyP-UNSAM) and holder of a degree in Conservation and Restoration of Cultural Goods (UMSA). She has completed specialized training in Electronic Document Management and Preservation... Read More →
CF

Carolina Figueredo

Intern, Archivo de la Memoria Trans Argentina
Carolina Figueredo is a trans woman and a survivor of the Argentine dictatorship and its aftermath. She is currently training at the Archivo de la Memoria Trans in the areas of archival and document conservation.
Thursday May 29, 2025 4:00pm - 4:30pm CDT
Hyatt Regency Minneapolis

4:00pm CDT

(Preventive Care) Heat protective covers: Enhancing Fire Preparedness for Cultural Collections and the case study of Emergency Planning in France
Thursday May 29, 2025 4:00pm - 4:30pm CDT
Fire risks pose a significant threat to cultural institutions’ collections. Hundreds of fires start every year in museums. Recent examples include the National Museum of Indonesia, Copenhagen’s Historic Stock Exchange, Brazil National Museum…

Some destroy entire collections, others cause irreparable damage, and most could be controlled or prevented.  

To improve preparedness and mitigate damage, a comprehensive Emergency Plan should be adopted with a complete operations plan that outline procedures for responding to fires. Collaborate with experts and conduct regular self-assessments to identify and minimize risks.  

In case of fire, damage is caused not only by the heat of the flames but also water and smoke.  




After the Notre-Dame Cathedral fire, the French National Association of Firefighters requested to conduct a study on protective tools for artwork, notably passive protective covers.    

Aside from this study conducted by the CSTB (Centre Scientifique et Technique du Bâtiment), a series of other experiments were made, including one from a Danish Cultural Institution and Fire Department.  

Those experiments are not limited to testing different materials and technologies (Tyvek, Aramid fibers, PU or Silicone coated fiberglass, aluminized fiberglass…), in laboratories, but also simulate real fire scenarios.    

Results from those experiments show that priority should be given to using passive protective covers with an aluminized material over traditional fire-retardant materials.   

These lightweight covers reflect up to 99% of radiant heat away from artwork, providing superior protection. During fire exercise, those covers have been shown to allow the artwork to stay below 40°C – 104°F and thus providing maximum protection in an environment that can reach more than 500°C – 932°F.  

By implementing these strategies, cultural institutions can mitigate fire risks and preserve valuable artifacts with minimum investment required in terms of infrastructure.   Additional measures, especially operational aspect and ease of handling are key at the time of using this material in an emergency, making passive covers a practical solution for cultural institutions.  

Proper training and involving all implied parties are required to optimize use of covers during an emergency and should be done on a regular basis in institutions.  

For the last six years, fire preparedness in France has been growing. 

Parties like the Government, the Ministry of Culture, Industry Associations, Cultural Institutions, Fire Departments, Specialist Consultants… have been raising awareness on the importance of this topic and implementing measures and tools to maximize chances to safeguard cultural heritage. This led France to being one of the most advanced countries on the topic.   

This session deep dives in the way Emergency Response in case of fire is approached in France, going through what Emergency Plans consist in, how are they constructed, the way they are implemented and how do cultural institutions make sure they get as ready as possible in case an emergency occurs to avoid and minimize damages on artwork.
Speakers
avatar for Grégoire Bernand

Grégoire Bernand

Product Manager - Cultural Heritage Protection, Otego
Grégoire Bernand has been working in the private sector as an art protection specialist. He has lived in five different countries in the ten years following, as a consultant.He has helped museums establish emergency plans focusing on fire damage prevention.More specifically, he... Read More →
Authors
avatar for Grégoire Bernand

Grégoire Bernand

Product Manager - Cultural Heritage Protection, Otego
Grégoire Bernand has been working in the private sector as an art protection specialist. He has lived in five different countries in the ten years following, as a consultant.He has helped museums establish emergency plans focusing on fire damage prevention.More specifically, he... Read More →
Thursday May 29, 2025 4:00pm - 4:30pm CDT
Hyatt Regency Minneapolis

4:00pm CDT

(Research & Technical Studies) The role of adsorption in the solubilization of paper degradation products: Using treatment observations as a springboard for scientific advances
Thursday May 29, 2025 4:00pm - 4:30pm CDT
Paper conservators working with different concentrations of agarose gels have observed that stain removal efficacy increases as the gelator concentration is increased. Although the exact process(es) contributing to this increase in efficacy have not been studied previously, many physical phenomena are thought to play a role, including diffusion and capillarity processes involved in the transport of solvent and solubilized components to and from a substrate placed into contact with a gel. We propose that the process of adsorption plays an important role in the sequestration of water-soluble products once they have migrated into the gel. The adsorption of solubilized components by the gel network essentially purifies the bulk solvent in the gel, increasing the uptake of more material and preventing redeposition. 

Adsorption measurements of solid agarose indicate that it could remove 90% of crystal violet (hexamethyl pararosaniline chloride, C25N3H30Cl) from an aqueous solution rapidly. Even when engaged in a gel network, agarose is capable of functioning as an adsorbent. Critically, a gelator can do more than act as a vehicle to deliver solvent: it can also trap solubilized components via adsorption onto its polymer chains. By adding a range of additional adsorbents, including microcrystalline cellulose powder and silica gel (200400 mesh), at 1 wt% into agarose gels, we have shown we can increase the adsorption rate and total cleaning capacity of these systems. One consequence is we can reduce the amount of gelator required for a treatment.

If the mechanisms at work within gels are better understood, it may be possible to design systems that amplify the effects of stain removal treatments while reducing the need for expensive and/or unsustainable materials. Agarose, a component of the algal extract agar, is costly due to the purification process involved in isolating the polymer and the limited availability of the algae from which it is derived.[1] However, agarose is often preferred for gel treatment of paper due to its minimal deposition of residue and the good aging properties of those potential residues.[2] This research offers an approach to decrease the quantities of this important resource needed to carry out a conservation treatment. The applicability of adsorbent-bulked agarose gels in hands-on conservation practice is being tested, and the effectiveness of specific adsorbents for certain applications is being investigated. Through the close collaboration between scientist and conservator, conservation practice informs scientific experimentation, and analytical results can impact treatment methodologies.

[1] Santos, R., Melo, R.A. Global shortage of technical agars: back to basics (resource management). J Appl Phycol 30, 2463–2473 (2018). https://doi.org/10.1007/s10811-018-1425-2

[2] Warda, J., Brückle, I., Bezúr, A., & Kushel, D. (2007). Analysis of Agarose, Carbopol, and Laponite Gel Poultices in Paper Conservation. Journal of the American Institute for Conservation, 46(3), 263–279. https://doi.org/10.1179/019713607806112260
Speakers
avatar for Teresa Duncan

Teresa Duncan

Conservation Scientist, National Gallery of Art
Teresa Duncan is a conservation scientist at the National Gallery of Art in Washington, DC. She received her PhD in Chemistry at Georgetown University, after which she completed two Postdoctoral fellowships, one at the National Institute of Standards and Technology and one at Smithsonian... Read More →
Authors
avatar for Teresa Duncan

Teresa Duncan

Conservation Scientist, National Gallery of Art
Teresa Duncan is a conservation scientist at the National Gallery of Art in Washington, DC. She received her PhD in Chemistry at Georgetown University, after which she completed two Postdoctoral fellowships, one at the National Institute of Standards and Technology and one at Smithsonian... Read More →
avatar for Barbara Berrie

Barbara Berrie

Head of Scientific Research, National Gallery of Art
Barbara H. Berrie is Head of the Scientific Research Department at the National Gallery of Art, Washington, D.C. She studies the materials and painting methods of artists and uses analysis of materials in order to understand artists’ original pictorial goals and to address issues... Read More →
avatar for Michelle Sullivan

Michelle Sullivan

Assistant Conservator, Department of Paper Conservation, J. Paul Getty Museum
Michelle Sullivan is Assistant Conservator of Drawings at the J. Paul Getty Museum. She holds an M.S. and Certificate of Advanced Study in Art Conservation from the Winterthur/University of Delaware Program in Art Conservation and a B.A. in the Art History and Studio Art from the... Read More →
Thursday May 29, 2025 4:00pm - 4:30pm CDT
Hyatt Regency Minneapolis

4:00pm CDT

(Textiles) Strategic(?) use of adhesive in treating fractured silk gauze layers of a complex garment.
Thursday May 29, 2025 4:00pm - 4:30pm CDT
A wedding ensemble of bodice, skirt, and veil, dated to 1840 in the collection of a regional museum was partially cleaned and entirely conserved. It had been worn at least twice, most recently by a descendant of the original owner in 1941, 101 years after it was made. The top layer of both bodice and skirt were of silk gauze, which was badly soiled on the skirt and fractured and torn on both pieces. Both featured a second robust layer of heavy silk satin, and the bodice had a further sturdy lining of plain-weave linen. Accessibility of the gauze layer for treatment was made difficult by its incorporation into cartridge pleats at the skirt waistband, and into all construction seaming of the bodice. Conservation involved partial disassembly of the skirt for wet cleaning and extensive underlays or overlays of silk crepeline on both pieces. A variety of seam and edge treatments were employed, including machine and hand stitching, with and without the addition of adhesive.
Speakers
avatar for Jennifer L. Cruise

Jennifer L. Cruise

Conservator, Textilis Conservation
Jennifer L. Cruise, Ph.D., MA Cons. originally trained as a scientist, taught at the university level, and directed a small research laboratory. She entered conservation as a volunteer assistant in the conservation department of the Minnesota Historical Society, studied at the Campbell... Read More →
Authors
avatar for Jennifer L. Cruise

Jennifer L. Cruise

Conservator, Textilis Conservation
Jennifer L. Cruise, Ph.D., MA Cons. originally trained as a scientist, taught at the university level, and directed a small research laboratory. She entered conservation as a volunteer assistant in the conservation department of the Minnesota Historical Society, studied at the Campbell... Read More →
Thursday May 29, 2025 4:00pm - 4:30pm CDT
Hyatt Regency Minneapolis

4:30pm CDT

(Photographic Materials) Conservation of the portrait of Leonardas Biržiška (1809 –1902)
Thursday May 29, 2025 4:30pm - 4:45pm CDT
The Biržiškos are meritorious Samogitian nobility family in Lithuania. Their history dates back to the 16th century in Karšuva patrimony. Mr. Leonardas  son  Mykolas (b. 1882) was one of the twenty of February 16th Act Signatories, a researcher of Lithuanian literature and folklore, the Rector, academic and professor of Vytautas Magnus University and Vilnius University. 

Vaclovas Biržiška (b. 1884) was a Lithuanian cultural scientist, the director of the libraries at Vytautas Magnus University and Vilnius University, the Dean of the Faculty of Law, academic and professor.

Viktoras Biržiška (b. 1886) was one of the creators of the Lithuanian Armed Forces, mathematician, the head and professor of the Department of Mathematical Analysis of Vytautas Magnus University and Vilnius University.

The reverse side of the Mr. Leonardas photograph is glued on thick cardboard. The surface side is framed with a hard greenish cardboard mat. The surfaces are very dirty, deformed, unevenly yellowing, spotted with insect excrement and spots of unclear origin, and dappled with spots that occurred from flowing fluid. Some parts at the corners and edges are missing, there are flaws and the paper is layered.

Silver gloss is visible on the surface of the photograph, and the features of the person in the photograph are highlighted with black lines. On the left of the upper part there is a slight flaw on the surface. 

The acidity of the paper was measured by a universal indicator. Acidity of the mat is pH ≈ 6. The acidity of the cardboard to which the photograph is glued is pH = 6-7.

After researching a paper fibre with a 2% aqueous sulfanilamide solution, it was found that the paper of the mat contains lignin, and there is no lignin in the cardboard on which the photograph is glued.

After visually evaluating the condition it was decided to restore the exhibit undismantled. In order to keep the restoration work safe, the order, techniques and materials to glue the flaws and restore the missing parts were considered with great responsibility. The surfaces of the exhibit were cleaned mechanically with wool, erasers of different hardness, and their shaves. The surface layer with insect excrement was removed with a scalpel.

The flaws and missing parts were restored in dry method by gluing the layers of restoration paper to achieve the thickness of the original cardboard. Cotton pulp paper and watercolour-toned Japanese Kizuki Kozo paper were used for restoration. It was glued with a mixture of corn starch plaster, Tylose MH300 and MH1000 aqueous solutions.

The restored parts of the surface of the mat have been retouched with watercolour and pastel, using the technique of dotting. Using a white watercolour pencil, the decorative strip of the mat and its inner edges were retouched as well as a sharp line of brown flowing fluid was split.
Speakers
avatar for Elvina Karosienė

Elvina Karosienė

Restorer of Paper Objects, Šiauliai "Aušros" Museum
In 1998, I graduated Vilnius Technology College. From 2000 until now, I have been working in Šiauliai “Aušros” Museum, Šiauliai, Lithuania.Because it is a museum, I have to deal with various kinds of paper objects: documents, books, works of art and photographs. Such a variety... Read More →
Authors
avatar for Elvina Karosienė

Elvina Karosienė

Restorer of Paper Objects, Šiauliai "Aušros" Museum
In 1998, I graduated Vilnius Technology College. From 2000 until now, I have been working in Šiauliai “Aušros” Museum, Šiauliai, Lithuania.Because it is a museum, I have to deal with various kinds of paper objects: documents, books, works of art and photographs. Such a variety... Read More →
Thursday May 29, 2025 4:30pm - 4:45pm CDT
Hyatt Regency Minneapolis

4:30pm CDT

(Paintings) Beva 371: past, present, and future
Thursday May 29, 2025 4:30pm - 4:50pm CDT
The Conserving Canvas Initiative project focused on reformulating BEVA 371 has completed its goal of making a new formulation of Beva 371 with the same activation properties of the formulation developed by Gustav Berger in the early 1970s. This became necessary because after about 2005 the main tackifier was discontinued, coincidentally around the time of Berger’s death, and the formulation containing the substitute tackifier required more heat to properly activate. Berger recommended 65 °C as the activation temperature and noted that it acted as a heat-set adhesive, not a hot melt adhesive. Posthumous formulations after 2005 perform more like  hot-melts and require activation temperatures of 70 °C. Through collaboration with the University of Akron (UA) Polymer Science and Engineering department, test formulations were screened and evaluated through a range of end-user testing methodologies common to Paintings Conservators working in museums and in private practice. Peel strength and shear studies were carried out at UA on mockups of paintings on linen and advanced shear testing was carried out at Virginia Tech. The Akron-optimized formulation is phthalate-free and has proven to have heat-set activation properties akin to Berger’s formulation. In addition to films and solutions currently available commercially, Akron is investigating solvent-free pellets and non-woven sheets of the formulation. The non-woven consists of monofilament that is pure adhesive cast onto release paper, similar to how the film is currently produced; it does not rely upon a carrier. The benefits of a heat-set adhesive based on the semi-crystalline EVA copolymers used in BEVA 371 and the prospects of the formulation available in both pelletized and non-woven forms are discussed.

Conflict of Interest: This research has been fully funded by the Getty Foundation and the authors have no financial or material interest in CPC or CTS, the producers of BEVA products.
Speakers
avatar for Kristin Patterson

Kristin Patterson

Paintings Conservator in Private Practice, Patterson Fine Art Conservation
Kristin Patterson is the Getty Research Fellow for the NYU-University of Akron project on reformulating Beva 371, Adjunct Professor at the Conservation Center, Institute of Fine Arts, New York University, and Owner of Patterson Fine Art Conservation, LLC.
avatar for Dean Yoder

Dean Yoder

Senior Conservator of Paintings and Head of Paintings Conservation, The Cleveland Museum of Art
Dean Yoder is the Lapis Senior Conservator of Paintings and Head of Paintings Conservation at the Cleveland Museum of Art. He is responsible for managing the paintings lab and overseeing the conservation and preservation of the Western paintings collection. Dean joined the CMA as... Read More →
Authors
avatar for Ali Dhinojwala

Ali Dhinojwala

H.A. Morton Professor, Department of Polymer Science, The University of Akron
avatar for Christopher McGlinchey

Christopher McGlinchey

Senior Research Scholar, Conservation Center, Institute of Fine Arts, New York University
Senior Research Scholar, New York University and Project Director, NYU-University of Akron Getty Foundation project on reformulating Beva 371
avatar for Dean Yoder

Dean Yoder

Senior Conservator of Paintings and Head of Paintings Conservation, The Cleveland Museum of Art
Dean Yoder is the Lapis Senior Conservator of Paintings and Head of Paintings Conservation at the Cleveland Museum of Art. He is responsible for managing the paintings lab and overseeing the conservation and preservation of the Western paintings collection. Dean joined the CMA as... Read More →
avatar for Dharamdeep Jain

Dharamdeep Jain

Research Scientist, School of Polymer Science and Polymer Engineering, The University of Akron
avatar for Kristin Patterson

Kristin Patterson

Paintings Conservator in Private Practice, Patterson Fine Art Conservation
Kristin Patterson is the Getty Research Fellow for the NYU-University of Akron project on reformulating Beva 371, Adjunct Professor at the Conservation Center, Institute of Fine Arts, New York University, and Owner of Patterson Fine Art Conservation, LLC.
Thursday May 29, 2025 4:30pm - 4:50pm CDT
Hyatt Regency Minneapolis

4:30pm CDT

(Architecture) It takes a village to save an American Treasure: Preserving the Swimming Pool Grotto ceiling mural at Vizcaya Museum and Gardens
Thursday May 29, 2025 4:30pm - 5:00pm CDT
A National Historic Landmark located in Miami, Vizcaya Museum and Gardens was constructed between 1914 and 1922 and features 14 distinctive structures. Though there are numerous highly decorated and site-specific spaces throughout the estate, the Swimming Pool Grotto is a particularly unique feature. Containing a ceiling mural painted by the distinguished American artist Robert Winthrop Chanler in 1916, it portrays a vibrant “undersea fantasy” that provides an immersive experience. A testament to Chanler’s distinctive, playful style, it is only one of only three publicly accessible Chanler murals in the United States.

 

However, the Swimming Pool Grotto at Vizcaya represents a particularly significant conservation challenge due to its unique design and the environmental pressures it faces, and surface deterioration was visible as early as 1918. The mural’s deterioration is particularly severe due to Chanler’s use of water-soluble paints, Plaster of Paris, aluminum gilding, and glazes ill-suited to the humid, coastal environment. These materials have led to significant paint loss, plaster detachment, and extensive damage. Recent assessments have also revealed corrosion in the underlying structural elements, adding to the urgency of the preservation work needed. Over the past 15 years, Vizcaya has meticulously documented the mural’s declining condition while embarking on a comprehensive conservation survey, undertaking a preliminary assessment in 2012, a structural systems analysis in 2014, a comprehensive condition assessment in 2017, and an environmental survey in 2023. In 2023, Vizcaya engaged an external conservation firm to address flaking throughout the painted surface and undertake a sample treatment area while simultaneously commissioning contractors to analyze the necessary repairs to the ceiling substructure and the Living Room floor above. The findings from these recent evaluations have emphasized the urgent need for more drastic intervention.

 

In 2024, Vizcaya was awarded a $750,000 Save America’s Treasures grant as administered by the National Park Service, Department of Interior. With a $750,000 match, this will enable us to perform necessary work to the substructure of the Living Room floor above the mural. This marks a transformative step forward in this conservation endeavor. This funding will support critical interventions, including structural repairs to the Living Room floor above the mural, which are essential to stabilizing the Grotto and ensuring the preservation of its artistic and historical integrity.

 

This presentation will discuss the extensive years-long preparatory work as well as the first phase of the work in the Living Room above that must be undertaken prior to the upcoming mural conservation. It will highlight the interdisciplinary collaboration that has been required to address the Swimming Pool Grotto’s complex conservation issues, encompassing research and analysis, structural engineering, and architectural conservation techniques, specifically cathodic protection. By sharing insights into the challenges faced and the collaborative strategies employed, this presentation will underscores the vital role of multi-disciplinary professional collaboration in the preservation and conservation of environmentally challenging and historically significant sites, showing that it indeed takes a village to save an American treasure like the Swimming Pool Grotto at Vizcaya Museum and Gardens.
Speakers
avatar for Davina Kuh Jakobi

Davina Kuh Jakobi

Lead Conservator, Vizcaya Museum and Gardens
Davina Kuh Jakobi is the Lead Conservator at Vizcaya Museum and Gardens. A conservator and museologist, Davina holds a dual Bachelor of Arts degree in Conservation and Art History, with a minor in Art, from the University of Delaware, as well as a Master of Art in Principles of Conservation... Read More →
Authors
avatar for Davina Kuh Jakobi

Davina Kuh Jakobi

Lead Conservator, Vizcaya Museum and Gardens
Davina Kuh Jakobi is the Lead Conservator at Vizcaya Museum and Gardens. A conservator and museologist, Davina holds a dual Bachelor of Arts degree in Conservation and Art History, with a minor in Art, from the University of Delaware, as well as a Master of Art in Principles of Conservation... Read More →
Thursday May 29, 2025 4:30pm - 5:00pm CDT
Hyatt Regency Minneapolis

4:30pm CDT

(Book and Paper) Manuscripts that multiplied – stories from the parchment partnerships
Thursday May 29, 2025 4:30pm - 5:00pm CDT
Multidisciplinarity draws on knowledge from different disciplines, but the context remains within those disciplines’ boundaries. Interdisciplinarity analyzes, coordinates and links knowledge between disciplines into a coherent composite. Inks&Skins https://inksandskins.org/ started as an interdisciplinary project dedicated to investigating the materiality of late-medieval Gaelic manuscripts but became so much more. The diverse groups involved expanded the research scope into that of transdisciplinarity, fully integrating the industry, conservation, manufacturing, heritage science, and scholarly research into a humanities context that transcended traditional boundaries of each of the disciplines. While multidisciplinary and interdisciplinary are additive and interactive respectively, transdisciplinary is holistic. 

Sponsored by the Irish Research Council, Inks&Skins set out with the goal of increasing our understanding of the substrate (parchment) and the composition of inks and pigments used by secular scholars who created Gaelic vellum books in the period 1100-1600.   The intent was to focus on one manuscript, the Book of Uí Mhaine, a large vellum manuscript of poetry and Irish tradition assembled c. 1390 for the Ó Ceallaigh (O’Kelly) family of Uí Mhaine in County Galway, Ireland. The synergy of more collaborating partners enriched the scope. Preservation Research and Testing Division (PRTD) Library of Congress (LC) staff, as part of an MOU with University College Cork (UCC), undertook multispectral imaging (MSI) at the Royal Irish Academy (RIA). The MSI was intended to only be on the Book of Uí Mhaine. However, engagement through sharing initial processing to read text through stains led to further manuscripts added to the docket, including Ireland’s oldest book, ‘The Cathach, a late 6th-century Psalter. Entrusting Inks&Skins with access to these precious manuscripts underlined the commitment of the Royal Irish Academy as partners in this innovative work.

Then the pandemic arrived, and we adapted to moving forward on collaborative research remotely. Data sharing challenges were but one of the barriers we had to work through. Industry partners in Ireland assisted with X-ray fluorescence spectroscopy (XRF) of the RIA manuscripts and then sent the data to PRTD for interpretation. Exhausting all we could from MSI and XRF data still left challenges with understanding the organic components of the inks and pigments in the manuscripts. PRTD staff created new ink and pigment reference samples for the Center for Heritage Analytical Reference Materials (CHARM). Utilizing instrumentation at LC, we essentially worked backwards to link fiber optic reflectance spectroscopy (FORS) reference curves with what we had captured from the MSI on the manuscripts. The addition of collaborators continued to expand the wealth of information  extracted from the data. Connecting the MSI processed images of the manuscripts with Trinity College conservators, parchmenters and creators, greatly assisted our ability to recognize tears, scraping patterns, poorly prepared skins, veining and other features related to construction techniques. Further collaborators and research partners included two doctoral fellows, archivists, calligraphers, ink-makers and Irish humanities scholars. The breadth of the collaboration was enriched by the willingness of all to listen, learn, and share ideas from diverse perspectives. The transdisciplinarity of this heritage research enabled creating new knowledge.
Speakers
avatar for Fenella France

Fenella France

Chief, Preservation Research and Testing Division, Library of Congress
Dr. Fenella G. France, Chief of the Preservation Research and Testing Division, Library of Congress, is an international specialist on environmental deterioration to cultural objects. She focuses on non-invasive spectral imaging and other complementary analytical techniques. Additionally... Read More →
Authors
avatar for Fenella France

Fenella France

Chief, Preservation Research and Testing Division, Library of Congress
Dr. Fenella G. France, Chief of the Preservation Research and Testing Division, Library of Congress, is an international specialist on environmental deterioration to cultural objects. She focuses on non-invasive spectral imaging and other complementary analytical techniques. Additionally... Read More →
avatar for Anna Hoffmann

Anna Hoffmann

PhD Researcher, University College Cork
Anna Hoffmann earned her BA in European History from Barnard College of Columbia University in New York City in 2020. Her final year dissertation was entitled “Medieval Manuscripts in the Modern World”, and focused on the tradition of medieval Irish manuscripts and how to understand... Read More →
avatar for Cynthia Connelly Ryan

Cynthia Connelly Ryan

Conservation Scientist, Library of Congress
Cindy Connelly Ryan is a Preservation Science Specialist at the Library of Congress, with a background in physics, art conservation, and art history. Her current research projects are focused on iron gall ink deterioration and stabilization, the recreation of obsolete historic artists... Read More →
avatar for Meghan Hill

Meghan Hill

Preservation Science Specialist, Library of Congress
Meghan Hill is a Preservation Science Specialist in the Preservation Research and Testing Division at the Library of Congress. Her background is in fine art, art history, and curatorial studies, having graduated with a BFA from the Maryland Institute College of Art. She is an expert... Read More →
avatar for Pádraig Ó Macháin

Pádraig Ó Macháin

Professor, University College Cork
Professor Pádraig Ó Macháin previously catalogued Gaelic manuscripts at the National Library of Ireland and elsewhere, and was responsible for co-founding and directing the Irish Script on Screen manuscript digitization project (www.isos.dias.ie) from its foundation at the Dublin... Read More →
Thursday May 29, 2025 4:30pm - 5:00pm CDT
Hyatt Regency Minneapolis

4:30pm CDT

(Contemporary Art )A Prophylactic Treatment: Two Condom Collage Replications in Joanne Leonard’s Journal of a Miscarriage (1973)
Thursday May 29, 2025 4:30pm - 5:00pm CDT
In 2021, the Whitney Museum of American Art acquired Joanne Leonard’s Journal of a Miscarriage (1973), a series of collages documenting the artist’s personal experience of pregnancy loss. Joanne Leonard is an American artist and scholar who uses photography and collage to explore feminist issues and visual culture through what she describes as “intimate documentary.” She taught at the University of Michigan for 31 years and is among the few photographers - and even fewer women artists - to have been included in Janson’s History of Art (1986) and Gardner’s Art Through the Ages (1990).

Journal of a Miscarriage, one of Leonard’s early photocollage works, was created in 1973 as the Roe v. Wade case and women’s reproductive healthcare were dominating public discourse. According to the artist, the Journal is “not just the story of the miscarriage but the feelings afterwards of sexuality and anger, desire, and a desire for pregnancy."

When the series of 29 collages entered the collection, two works--Death, 1973 and Condom with Stamps, 1973--incorporated 1970s latex condoms which had deteriorated significantly. Death, 1973, was deemed unexhibitable as the embrittled condom was fragmented and darkened to a blood red-brown and had discolored the adjacent collage materials. Condom with Stamps, 1973 is no longer extant and was included by the artist with an inkjet print surrogate. The inkjet print differed in size and materiality from the other 28 works in the series, presenting more of a facsimile of the work than exhibition copy.

The presentation will outline the collaborative decision-making process around these two collages by paper conservator Clara Rojas-Sebesta and objects conservator Margo Delidow, in close discussion with the artist, who provided original collage materials from her archives in addition to contextual guidance. The treatment of the original and the replica fabrication led to an exploration of 21st century condom technologies, an intimate encounter with lubricants and a confrontation with the inherent vice of degraded latex, which dovetailed with Delidow’s research on Lynda Benglis’ latex with the Detroit Institute of Art, presented at the 2024 AIC annual meeting.

Leonard sourced much of her photographic collage materials from the seminal 1965 book, A Child Is Born, by Swedish photojournalist Lennart Nilsson, as well as The Boy’s King Arthur, (1917) illustrated by N.C. Wyeth. The presentation will also touch upon the meaning in these materials and the exhibition history of this work as it reflects attitudes towards miscarriage and women’s reproductive healthcare. Through the refabrication of these collages and documentation of artist’s intent, the project results in a recovery of meaning in Joanne Leonard’s poignant Journal of a Miscarriage.
Speakers
avatar for Clara Rojas Sebesta

Clara Rojas Sebesta

Ellsworth Kelly Conservator of Works on Paper, Whitney Museum of American Art
Clara Rojas-Sebesta is the Ellsworth Kelly Conservator of Works on Paper at the Whitney Museum of American Art. Clara has published and presented on the theoretical and practical framework of the Museum’s Replication Committee and researched the materials and practices of June Leaf... Read More →
Authors
avatar for Clara Rojas Sebesta

Clara Rojas Sebesta

Ellsworth Kelly Conservator of Works on Paper, Whitney Museum of American Art
Clara Rojas-Sebesta is the Ellsworth Kelly Conservator of Works on Paper at the Whitney Museum of American Art. Clara has published and presented on the theoretical and practical framework of the Museum’s Replication Committee and researched the materials and practices of June Leaf... Read More →
avatar for Margo Delidow

Margo Delidow

Assistant Conservator, Whitney Museum of American Art
Margo Delidow is the Cy Twombly Conservator for the Whitney Museum of American Art and co-owner and partner at Whryta Contemporary Art Conservation. She completed a Masters of Arts and Certificate of Advanced Study in Conservation from the Art Conservation Program at Buffalo State... Read More →
Thursday May 29, 2025 4:30pm - 5:00pm CDT
Hyatt Regency Minneapolis

4:30pm CDT

(Electronic Media) Refining Workflows: Using the Iteration Report as an Advocacy Tool
Thursday May 29, 2025 4:30pm - 5:00pm CDT
The iteration report, first proposed by Joanna Philips, has been used in conservation to document each manifestation of a time-based media artwork with the understanding that each iteration results in changes to the work. These reports often encourage the writer to reflect on the iteration in terms of the appearance of the work, decision-making processes that led to the final result, and to assess whether it was successful and why. 




In one instance at the Museum of Fine Arts, Houston, we used the iteration report on an unaccessioned artwork to not only reflect on the final appearance of the artwork, but also to consider the entire installation process for time-based artworks at the museum. The Museum recently hired a time-based media conservator; thus, some of the aims of this iteration report were to diagnose inefficiencies in current workflows as well as creating an ideal iteration report to serve as a model for future reports. The report was written in a collaborative manner with stakeholders in the Audio/Visual and Registrarial Departments. We are choosing not to name the artwork because it is not owned by the museum. This artwork’s installation, which was its second iteration, necessitated purchasing new equipment and altering the exhibition space which resulted in delays to the opening. The installation also coincided with other installations with tight deadlines, which placed intense pressure on museum staff. The iteration report served as a vehicle that allowed us to track where workflows could be improved to avoid having those same challenges in the future.




To aid us in this reflexive practice, we made some modifications to the report.  We created a timeline to note every decision that was made about the work from the moment it was considered for exhibition through the end of the exhibition, expanding the focus beyond the final presentation of the work. We also rigorously documented the labor involved in creating the report. After the report was written, it was used as a tool to inform workflows for installing other time-based artworks. This use of the iteration report became a catalyst for change in the museum with respect to how time-based media artworks are understood and handled, and therefore became a tool for internal advocacy. This adaptation of the report could serve as a model for other stewards who are advocating for improved time-based media workflows in their institutions.
Speakers
avatar for Caroline Gil Rodríguez

Caroline Gil Rodríguez

Conservator, Time-Based Media, Museum of Fine Arts, Houston
Caroline Gil Rodríguez is a time-based media conservator, archivist, and writer from Puerto Rico. Caroline has experience working in time-based media conservation within a variety of contexts, including: museums and cultural heritage institutions; artists and artists estates; media... Read More →
AH

Adrian Hernandez

Graduate Fellow (Class of 2026), New York University
adrian hernandez (they/them) is an emerging memory and conservation student at New York University.
Authors
avatar for Caroline Gil Rodríguez

Caroline Gil Rodríguez

Conservator, Time-Based Media, Museum of Fine Arts, Houston
Caroline Gil Rodríguez is a time-based media conservator, archivist, and writer from Puerto Rico. Caroline has experience working in time-based media conservation within a variety of contexts, including: museums and cultural heritage institutions; artists and artists estates; media... Read More →
AH

Adrian Hernandez

Graduate Fellow (Class of 2026), New York University
adrian hernandez (they/them) is an emerging memory and conservation student at New York University.
FS

Flora Schaeffer

Assistant Registrar, Incoming Loans, Museum of Fine Arts
KO

Kirston Otis

Lead Audio-Visual Technician, Museum of Fine Arts
Thursday May 29, 2025 4:30pm - 5:00pm CDT
Hyatt Regency Minneapolis

4:30pm CDT

(Objects) Exploring Consolidation of Degraded Natural Foam Rubber
Thursday May 29, 2025 4:30pm - 5:00pm CDT
The degradation mechanisms of natural rubber have been studied extensively. At present, there is no known protocol for reversing, or even stopping, the degradation. This problematic material is prevalent throughout the Smithsonian’s National Air and Space Museum’s (NASM) collection. One collection subset of concern is the foam rubber face pads on aviator goggles, dating from the 1910’s to the 1970’s. NASM has over 80 artifacts that fall into this subset. As foam rubber ages, it frequently requires intervention if loss of original material is to be avoided. Such interventions typically require introducing adhesives but the long-term impacts of using adhesives on degraded rubber are underexplored. This research project was designed to investigate the impacts of consolidating degraded natural rubber. The first phase of the project establishes a working definition of “natural rubber” and “consolidation” based on an extensive literature review. The second phase of the project includes testing of a variety of consolidants on foamed rubber samples. Currently, tests are being conducted to determine the efficacy of mixtures of isinglass and methylcellulose for use as a consolidant in both liquid and foam applications. The final phase of this project will include treatment of foam rubber face pads from multiple pairs of NASM’s aviator goggles. While exploratory, the treatment is backed by extensive research and testing and aims to offer a viable protocol for consolidation of degraded rubber.
Speakers
avatar for Lindsay Cross

Lindsay Cross

Graduate Fellow (Class of 2023), Smithsonian's National Air and Space Museum
Lindsay Cross is an Engen Conservation Fellow at the National Air and Space Museum's Steven F. Udvar-Hazy Center in Chantilly, Virginia. She is a graduate of the Patricia H. & Richard E. Garman Art Conservation Department. Previously, she interned and worked at the Virginia Museum... Read More →
Authors
avatar for Lindsay Cross

Lindsay Cross

Graduate Fellow (Class of 2023), Smithsonian's National Air and Space Museum
Lindsay Cross is an Engen Conservation Fellow at the National Air and Space Museum's Steven F. Udvar-Hazy Center in Chantilly, Virginia. She is a graduate of the Patricia H. & Richard E. Garman Art Conservation Department. Previously, she interned and worked at the Virginia Museum... Read More →
avatar for Lauren Horelick

Lauren Horelick

Object Conservator, Smithsonian's National Air and Space Museum
Lauren Anne Horelick has been an objects conservator at NASM since 2012. She has a BFA in Sculpture from the San Francisco Art Institute, a BA in Art Conservation from the University of Delaware, and an MA in archaeological and ethnographic conservation from University of California... Read More →
Thursday May 29, 2025 4:30pm - 5:00pm CDT
Hyatt Regency Minneapolis

4:30pm CDT

(Preventive Care) Turning Leaks into Lessons: Insights from a Water Leak Response in University Special Collections
Thursday May 29, 2025 4:30pm - 5:00pm CDT
In August 2024, University of Arizona Libraries' Special Collections faced a water leak that damaged book and archival collections across two floors. The decision was made to close Special Collections for two weeks, allowing the department to focus on the remediation of damaged materials and spaces. Thanks to remarkable teamwork and opportune timing, all affected materials were successfully salvaged. The incident underscored both the strengths of our collective response and areas where our emergency preparedness could be improved.

Clear and timely communication proved essential during the emergency response and recovery. Daily posters with tasks and instructions helped the salvaging team adapt to shifting priorities. Bi-daily meetings played a pivotal role in maintaining communication and monitoring progress, allowing the team to work together effectively in the fast-paced recovery process. Ensuring staff wellbeing throughout the process—with check-ins, meals, music, and breaks—kept the team motivated and capable of sustaining the long hours required. However, standardized, pre-written initial messages calling an emergency and outlining required level of response could have prevented early confusion and hesitation, leading to a more streamlined initial response.

Since most affected materials were archival in nature, dissociation posed a significant risk during initial response and salvaging efforts. Within the first hour of discovering the leak, a dual documentation system was developed, to track affected items as they were relocated and unpacked. The same documentation was used to track progress during drying, checking, and rehousing. A flagging system to record damages and actions was developed in the following days, but a pre-established log form would have further reduced confusion and saved time as the salvaging process unfolded.

Affected materials were laid out to dry within three hours upon discovery of the leak. Assessment of levels of wetness, replacement of identifiers for collection materials, and removal of wet boxes from the recovery spaces were completed on the first day. Dehumidifiers were installed and interleaving of affected materials started immediately. The team acted quickly but carefully, never jeopardizing safety or materials. However, dry materials were not removed from the affected storage areas on the first day, leading to additional damage on the second day, further straining available resources. Furthermore, some pockets of wetness in the building went unnoticed for several days, highlighting the need for a more thorough and comprehensive approach from the incident management team.

The team’s willingness to help was a major strength, but the event highlighted areas for improvement in leadership and coordination. Establishing a clearer chain of command and designating team leads for specific tasks would have improved efficiency. Regular staff training in emergency response and leadership is essential to empower individuals to confidently assume roles and responsibilities in such situations, ultimately enhancing future response efforts.

The paper will offer valuable insights and practical tools that conservators and emergency response leads at other organizations can adapt to improve their own preparedness and response efforts. By sharing lessons learned and successful strategies, it aims to help other institutions streamline their communication, documentation, and leadership processes during emergencies.
Speakers
avatar for Fleur van der Woude

Fleur van der Woude

Special Collections Preventive Conservator, University of Arizona Libraries
Fleur van der Woude works at University of Arizona Libraries Special Collections in Tucson, AZ. She manages the Preservation Studio, where a small team works on a broad range of activities to ensure preservation and accessibility of Special Collections and circulating collections... Read More →
avatar for Elise Etrheim

Elise Etrheim

Preservation Assistant, University of Arizona Libraries Special Collections
Elise Etrheim holds a Bachelor of Science in Chemistry with a minor in Art History from Emory University, where she first discovered her interest in art conservation and preservation. During her undergraduate studies, she completed an internship at the Michael C. Carlos Museum and... Read More →
Authors
avatar for Fleur van der Woude

Fleur van der Woude

Special Collections Preventive Conservator, University of Arizona Libraries
Fleur van der Woude works at University of Arizona Libraries Special Collections in Tucson, AZ. She manages the Preservation Studio, where a small team works on a broad range of activities to ensure preservation and accessibility of Special Collections and circulating collections... Read More →
avatar for Elise Etrheim

Elise Etrheim

Preservation Assistant, University of Arizona Libraries Special Collections
Elise Etrheim holds a Bachelor of Science in Chemistry with a minor in Art History from Emory University, where she first discovered her interest in art conservation and preservation. During her undergraduate studies, she completed an internship at the Michael C. Carlos Museum and... Read More →
Thursday May 29, 2025 4:30pm - 5:00pm CDT
Hyatt Regency Minneapolis

4:30pm CDT

(Research & Technical Studies) On the development of Xanthan-Konjac/Agar physical hydrogels and their analogs for conservation cleaning applications
Thursday May 29, 2025 4:30pm - 5:00pm CDT
In recent decades, conservators and conservation scientists have proposed additions and refinements to the conservation cleaning toolkit, drawing inspiration from allied fields and leveraging expertise from industrial chemists and soft matter scientists. As a result, the field has seen continued progress toward options with improved control and specificity while also favoring materials and techniques that are more sustainable and safer for the practitioner and the environment.

Inspired by conservators’ creative adaptations of rigid physical hydrogels and the working properties of chemical hydrogels adopted by the field in recent years, this paper describes the development of physical hydrogels that are thermoreversible, optically clear, cohesive, flexible, and conformable with surprising elasticity and gel strength. Drawing from food science, haute cuisine, and traditional foodways, the shared formulations are based on the synergistic binding of xanthan gum and konjac glucomannans modified with a second network of agar or agarose. These versatile, cost-effective gels are simple to produce and are compatible with typical aqueous preparations used in conservation cleaning. Additionally, these hydrogels provide options for delivery of small proportions of organic solvents and microemulsions capable of swelling and removing tenacious coatings and overpaints with minimal mechanical action. Analogous formulations substituting other glucomannans or galactomannans and selecting agar instead of agarose offer flexible decision-making favoring economic and environmental sustainability by sourcing materials native to many regions around the globe.

The development of xanthan-konjac/agar gels and their analogs has been informed by early tests in several cross-specialty professional workshops and academic courses, providing key insights into how this versatile addition to the cleaning toolkit complements our established range of rigid gels, viscous polymeric solutions and spreadable gels, viscoelastic gels, and chemical hydrogels. Case studies from collaborators will be shared in another proposed submission.
Speakers
avatar for Matthew Cushman

Matthew Cushman

George F. & Sibyl H. Fuller Conservator in Charge, Worcester Art Museum
Matthew Cushman is the George F. & Sibyl H. Fuller Conservator in Charge at the Worcester Art Museum. In addition to leading the Museum’s conservation department, Matthew oversees the care of WAM’s collection of approximately 1,750 paintings. As time allows, he provides consultation... Read More →
Authors
avatar for Matthew Cushman

Matthew Cushman

George F. & Sibyl H. Fuller Conservator in Charge, Worcester Art Museum
Matthew Cushman is the George F. & Sibyl H. Fuller Conservator in Charge at the Worcester Art Museum. In addition to leading the Museum’s conservation department, Matthew oversees the care of WAM’s collection of approximately 1,750 paintings. As time allows, he provides consultation... Read More →
Thursday May 29, 2025 4:30pm - 5:00pm CDT
Hyatt Regency Minneapolis

4:30pm CDT

(Textiles) Reflections on Twenty-Five Years in Private Practice
Thursday May 29, 2025 4:30pm - 5:00pm CDT
Not all museum conservators work in museums. This is a common start to conversations between conservators in private practice and our acquaintances, family, and potential clients. Sometimes it takes the insights of outsiders to the art world to realize just how demanding this career choice can be. Twenty-five years ago, I found myself in the position that many conservators have or perhaps will have when work opportunities and life goals do not line up. The result was the establishment of Museum Textile Services, which allowed me to combine my experience working at regional conservation labs with what I had learned growing up in a family full of self-employed academic and technical specialists. This presentation will cast a frank and occasionally humorous light on how to meet both the expected and unexpected challenges encountered by conservators in private practice, and how today’s post-pandemic economic and social climates are fuel for advancement and improvement in our practice. The newest statistical information about demographics in both emerging conservation professionals and experienced professionals choosing to temporarily or permanently turn to private practice, will be gathered in a survey to be released in January, 2025. These findings will build on the Summer, 2024, survey by the newly inaugurated Icon Private Practice Group in the UK, and the 2024 survey on Mental Health in the Conservation Workplace that was circulated by the AIC’s CIPP community.
Speakers
avatar for Camille Myers Breeze

Camille Myers Breeze

Director/Chief Conservator, Museum Textile Services
Camille holds a BA in Art History from Oberlin College, and an MA in Costume and Textiles Conservation from the Fashion Institute of Technology. She spent five years in the Textile Conservation Laboratory at the Cathedral of St. John the Divine in New York City before moving to the... Read More →
Authors
avatar for Camille Myers Breeze

Camille Myers Breeze

Director/Chief Conservator, Museum Textile Services
Camille holds a BA in Art History from Oberlin College, and an MA in Costume and Textiles Conservation from the Fashion Institute of Technology. She spent five years in the Textile Conservation Laboratory at the Cathedral of St. John the Divine in New York City before moving to the... Read More →
Thursday May 29, 2025 4:30pm - 5:00pm CDT
Hyatt Regency Minneapolis

4:45pm CDT

(Photographic Materials) Developing Conservator: My Journey in Darkroom Photography
Thursday May 29, 2025 4:45pm - 5:00pm CDT
In the field of art conservation, understanding of an artist's chosen materials and their creative  application is fundamental. This holds true for photograph conservation, where a profound grasp of the historic evolution and chemistry of photographic processes is crucial for discerning and identifying each technique. However, deeper learning is achieved through hands-on engagement in the darkroom. Delving into the intricacies of photographic processes not only unveils the technology, tools, and chemistry underpinning their production  but also serves as an invaluable experiential learning tool. Darkroom practice enables observation and critical thinking  about a photograph’s evolution from its initial creation to potential display, and how these factors influence its long-term preservation. It also facilitates an understanding of the differences between genuine deterioration and intentional alterations made by a photographer. Creating photographs in the darkroom can combine research into the history and chemistry of photography with research into photographers, studios, and businesses utilizing these techniques today. The sensitivities of different emulsions can also be experimented with and observed. The addition of toners or other chemical baths in the darkroom can be understood by seeing the change in color of a print and its stability over time. This immersive exploration equips conservators with a dynamic perspective that informs their decision-making in the outreach, preservation, and treatment of photographic materials.  When creating albumen prints for example, the paper curls at all stages of production from the first application of the egg-salt mixture to the final wash bath. This demonstrates the inherent qualities of these prints and though we may consider curling damaging and work to keep the print flat, it is also an unavoidable part of the making process. While striving to maintain flatness, historically, albumen prints would be mounted to a paper board. This mounting process, though keeping the print from curling, could potentially introduce cracking in the emulsion over time. The tendency of the print to curl and potential cycles of curling and flattening demonstrate its sensitivity to moisture and the need for a stable environment and safe housing for long term preservation. Additionally, through making albumen prints, the similarities to the salted paper print process are clearly identifiable. The recipes for chemical baths and steps in the darkroom are nearly equivalent. It is understandable why their identification might be challenging. Finally, the darkroom also serves as a platform for outreach, where sharing the art and science of photography through workshops and social media can enhance public understanding and appreciation of art conservation. This is increasingly important in an era when images are so easily captured, duplicated, and distributed.




Images to be included on the poster:

•    Creating albumen prints: fresh untoned print, fresh gold toned print, historic aged print

•    Creating additive color screen plates: results from experiment, diagram of the layers

•    Creating tintypes: the “negative” pre-fixer, final positive product

•    Creating gelatin DOP: contaminated fixer resulting in pink print

•    Outreach: social media- QR code to share, creating salted paper prints and leading workshops at SUNY Buffalo and WUDPAC photo block
Speakers
avatar for Sophie Church

Sophie Church

Graduate Fellow (Class of 2025), SUNY Buffalo State University
Sophie Church is a Graduate Fellow specializing in photographic materials conservation at the Garman Art Conservation Department at SUNY Buffalo State University. Her conservation experience includes internships at the Harry Ransom Center in Austin, Texas and former employment as... Read More →
Authors
avatar for Sophie Church

Sophie Church

Graduate Fellow (Class of 2025), SUNY Buffalo State University
Sophie Church is a Graduate Fellow specializing in photographic materials conservation at the Garman Art Conservation Department at SUNY Buffalo State University. Her conservation experience includes internships at the Harry Ransom Center in Austin, Texas and former employment as... Read More →
avatar for Theresa Smith

Theresa Smith

Associate Professor of Paper Conservation, SUNY Buffalo State University
Theresa J. Smith is Associate Professor of Paper Conservation in the Patricia H. and Richard E. Garman Art Conservation Department at SUNY Buffalo State University, where she also coordinates the Library and Archive Conservation Education (LACE) and photograph conservation curricula... Read More →
Thursday May 29, 2025 4:45pm - 5:00pm CDT
Hyatt Regency Minneapolis

4:50pm CDT

(Paintings) BEVA 371: An examination of morphological properties and the visualization of stress in mock painting samples using advanced thermal, spectroscopic, and imaging methods
Thursday May 29, 2025 4:50pm - 5:10pm CDT
Advanced thermomechanical studies have been carried out on the first formulation BEVA 371 containing Laropal K-80 (discontinued ca. 2005) and formulations recently developed at the University of Akron. Studies are based on neat films of the adhesives and adhered bonds between a mock painting on linen and linen and polyester lining canvases.  Creep behavior of old and new formulations using principles of thermomechanical analysis and time-temperature superposition (TTSP) produce master curves allowing for the creep performance of the adhesive to be predicted over longer time periods. Furthermore, by utilizing small/wide-angle X-ray scattering methods and fast-scanning calorimetry, we relate the adhesive’s creep performance to the underlying semi-crystalline morphology, which can be fine-tuned based on the thermal treatment of the adhesive during activation. Additionally, creep behavior of mock samples was imaged by (3-dimensional) digital image correlation (DIC) analysis under fixed-load creep testing. Findings provide insight into qualities related to the performance of the adhesive during activation and illustrate concerns of stress concentration relevant to edge-lining treatments but absent in full linings. 

Conflict of Interest: This research has been fully funded by the Getty Foundation and the authors have no financial or material interest in CPC or CTS, the producers of BEVA products.
Speakers
EC

Erin Crater

PhD Candidate (Chemistry), Moore Research Group, Virginia Tech
AM

Aidan Miller

Student, Virginia Tech
Undergraduate student in Mechanical Engineering, Virginia Tech
avatar for Robert Moore

Robert Moore

Professor and Director, Macromolecules Innovation Institute, Virginia Tech
Authors
EC

Erin Crater

PhD Candidate (Chemistry), Moore Research Group, Virginia Tech
AM

Aidan Miller

Student, Virginia Tech
Undergraduate student in Mechanical Engineering, Virginia Tech
CJ

Christopher Jackson

Mechanical Engineering Student, Virginia Tech
avatar for Christopher McGlinchey

Christopher McGlinchey

Senior Research Scholar, Conservation Center, Institute of Fine Arts, New York University
Senior Research Scholar, New York University and Project Director, NYU-University of Akron Getty Foundation project on reformulating Beva 371
avatar for David Dillard

David Dillard

Adhesive and Sealant Science Professor, Virginia Tech
avatar for Dean Yoder

Dean Yoder

Senior Conservator of Paintings and Head of Paintings Conservation, The Cleveland Museum of Art
Dean Yoder is the Lapis Senior Conservator of Paintings and Head of Paintings Conservation at the Cleveland Museum of Art. He is responsible for managing the paintings lab and overseeing the conservation and preservation of the Western paintings collection. Dean joined the CMA as... Read More →
JC

Jackson Charles

Mechanical Engineering Student, Virginia Tech
avatar for Kristin Patterson

Kristin Patterson

Paintings Conservator in Private Practice, Patterson Fine Art Conservation
Kristin Patterson is the Getty Research Fellow for the NYU-University of Akron project on reformulating Beva 371, Adjunct Professor at the Conservation Center, Institute of Fine Arts, New York University, and Owner of Patterson Fine Art Conservation, LLC.
RD

Rafaella De Vita

Associate Department Head of Research Professor, Virginia Tech
Associate Department Head of Research Professor, Virginia Tech
avatar for Robert Moore

Robert Moore

Professor and Director, Macromolecules Innovation Institute, Virginia Tech
Thursday May 29, 2025 4:50pm - 5:10pm CDT
Hyatt Regency Minneapolis

5:00pm CDT

(Paintings) Bringing BEVA 371 into the future: refinements and expanded forms
Thursday May 29, 2025 5:00pm - 5:10pm CDT
Research was conducted in the School of Polymer Science and Polymer Engineering at the University of Akron to investigate the development of an ethylene vinyl acetate (EVA) adhesive for the lining of paintings.  The goal was to make a formulation closer to performance of the original material introduced in the 1970s. Studies found a temperature dependence between the crystalline and amorphous band of the ethylene component of the copolymer in the FTIR spectrum. It was also observed that this trend correlated with tack development. Thus, screening of candidates for replacement tackifier was made more efficient by gathering temperature dependent FTIR spectra of small samples of experimental formulations. The more successful candidates were further screened through mockups prepared by Paintings Conservators and tested in replicates allowing for statistics of bond strength to be included in the findings. The resulting formulation is a phthalate-free formulation utilizing a hydrogenated rosin ester tackifier. In addition to a revised formulation in the traditional solutions, research included calendaring of solvent-free films, experimental testing of aqueous dispersions, the processing of the optimized formulation into pellets and a non-woven cast onto release paper. The final phase of this project consisted of sharing these procedures with the commercial manufacturers of BEVA products to better meet the needs of the cultural heritage community.  

Conflict of Interest: This research has been fully funded by the Getty Foundation and the authors have no financial or material interest in CPC or CTS, the producers of BEVA products.
Speakers
avatar for Dharamdeep Jain

Dharamdeep Jain

Research Scientist, School of Polymer Science and Polymer Engineering, The University of Akron
Authors
avatar for Dharamdeep Jain

Dharamdeep Jain

Research Scientist, School of Polymer Science and Polymer Engineering, The University of Akron
avatar for Ali Dhinojwala

Ali Dhinojwala

H.A. Morton Professor, Department of Polymer Science, The University of Akron
avatar for Christopher McGlinchey

Christopher McGlinchey

Senior Research Scholar, Conservation Center, Institute of Fine Arts, New York University
Senior Research Scholar, New York University and Project Director, NYU-University of Akron Getty Foundation project on reformulating Beva 371
avatar for Dean Yoder

Dean Yoder

Senior Conservator of Paintings and Head of Paintings Conservation, The Cleveland Museum of Art
Dean Yoder is the Lapis Senior Conservator of Paintings and Head of Paintings Conservation at the Cleveland Museum of Art. He is responsible for managing the paintings lab and overseeing the conservation and preservation of the Western paintings collection. Dean joined the CMA as... Read More →
avatar for Kristin Patterson

Kristin Patterson

Paintings Conservator in Private Practice, Patterson Fine Art Conservation
Kristin Patterson is the Getty Research Fellow for the NYU-University of Akron project on reformulating Beva 371, Adjunct Professor at the Conservation Center, Institute of Fine Arts, New York University, and Owner of Patterson Fine Art Conservation, LLC.
Thursday May 29, 2025 5:00pm - 5:10pm CDT
Hyatt Regency Minneapolis

5:00pm CDT

(Book and Paper) Keeping the Wolf from the Door: Remediating the Effects of Pressure-sensitive Tape While Preserving Artistic Intention
Thursday May 29, 2025 5:00pm - 5:30pm CDT
The American premiere of Peter and the Wolf occurred in March 1938 at Symphony Hall in Boston, with its composer, Sergei Prokofiev, conducting the Boston Symphony Orchestra. Prokofiev conducted from his own handwritten score which he amended by taping English translations over the original text with pressure-sensitive tape. During the rehearsal process, he wrote dynamics and phrasing notes into the score with a blue pencil, sometimes directly over the tape carrier. The tape adhesive stained the manuscript as it degraded, and adhesive creep caused pages to stick together. Some tape had degraded to the point of adhesive failure, risking the loss of both tape carrier and handwritten additions to the score.

Usually, the most appropriate solution is to remove both the tape carrier and adhesive where possible to prevent further damage. In this case, however, there were several complicating factors that made treatment less straightforward. The tape was applied intentionally by the composer and showed evidence of his creative process. In addition to preserving the original intentions and aesthetics of the piece, keeping the tape also preserved the composer’s notes written onto its surface.

Samples were tested prior to treatment to determine the least disruptive and most stable methods for consolidating media, reducing adhesive, and reattaching the tape carrier. Consolidating the friable blue pencil marks on a slick, transparent surface proved to be difficult. It took multiple tests to find a consolidant that firmly adhered to the tape carrier and didn’t dull the surface sheen but could also be easily reversed without removing the friable media underneath.

Tape removal required a flexible approach. Some of the adhesive was heavily deteriorated and had lost all its tack, making it easy to remove. A greater proportion of the tape was only partially degraded and therefore extremely tacky. While a crepe eraser removed excess adhesive from paper easily, the adhesive clung persistently to the tape carrier. To break up the gumminess of the adhesive, dry wheat starch powder was applied in a fine layer.

After the hidden text underneath the taped areas was digitized, the tape carrier and translations were reattached to the paper in their original positions. It was challenging to find an adhesive that readhered the tape carrier to the text while also maintaining its optical properties. After extensive testing with samples, a heat-set application of BEVA® 371 film was selected due to its clarity, ease of application, and reversibility.

Now that treatment and digitization has occurred, the manuscript is stable and much more accessible to its readers. Loose amendments and tape carrier pieces are reattached and the friable blue pencil marks are consolidated. While the damage caused by the tape adhesive can never be reversed, the remaining adhesive has been reduced to protect against future degradation. The previously hidden and never-before-studied text is available for scholars to study via digital surrogate. Despite the unusual challenges presented by this project, conservation honored the future needs of the piece without removing the historic significance of its most damaging aspects.
Speakers
avatar for Mary French

Mary French

Conservation Officer, Boston Public Library
Mary French is a book conservator for Special Collections at the Boston Public Library. She previously worked for the Northeast Document Conservation Center (NEDCC) and Cambridge University Library, and has interned at Harvard Business School’s Baker Library, the Boston Athenaeum... Read More →
Authors
avatar for Mary French

Mary French

Conservation Officer, Boston Public Library
Mary French is a book conservator for Special Collections at the Boston Public Library. She previously worked for the Northeast Document Conservation Center (NEDCC) and Cambridge University Library, and has interned at Harvard Business School’s Baker Library, the Boston Athenaeum... Read More →
Thursday May 29, 2025 5:00pm - 5:30pm CDT
Hyatt Regency Minneapolis

5:00pm CDT

(Contemporary Art ) On the intersection of art and human rights: Collective efforts to preserve the work of imprisoned artist Luis Manuel Otero Alcantara
Thursday May 29, 2025 5:00pm - 5:30pm CDT
During World War II and the times of political and ethnic persecution preceding it, a part of the art world came together to protect artists at risk and rescue their work, as well as that of old masters, from burning on pyres or being trafficked by military regimes. Despite these coordinated efforts by democratic forces, many lives and heritage were lost. The recovery of lost or trafficked art remains at the center of the mission of many cultural institutions to this day. In 2024, as seventy percent of the world population lives under autocracies, and democracies erode worldwide every year, with censorship, systematic persecution and forced displacement of hundreds of thousands of people worldwide as a consequence, the question arises: Should preservation professionals play an active role advocating for the protection, not only of the artworks, but of the endangered artists’ integrity as well? 

With this proposition in mind, we will present our experiences collaborating with Luis Manuel Otero Alcantara, an artist imprisoned in Cuba since 2021 for his political activism, in documenting his creative processes, evacuating some of his artworks, and advocating for his release, as part of collective efforts from his close friends, supporters in the art world, and the international community.

Otero Alcantara, born in Havana in 1987, is a Cuban self-taught artist and political activist, better known for his performances and hunger strikes in defiance of the country’s Communist regime authorities. In 2018, he co founded the San Isidro Movement, to protest the imminent enactment of repressive cultural policies under Decree 349. From that moment, he was systematically persecuted by the state forces and regularly detained, until he was finally arrested in July 2021 after his attempt to participate in the unprecedentedly massive anti regime protests that took place across the country. Earlier that year, in April, the political police had broken into his studio and destroyed a group of artworks he was producing with the involvement of the San Isidro community, before sequestering him for several weeks in a hospital. 

Anamely Ramos, who was a member of the San Isidro Movement, has been interviewing Luis Manuel Otero Alcantara throughout the last five years, delving on his motives and techniques, his use of diverse media, from sculptures and drawings to performances, and his constant efforts to activate and involve communities in his work. She has also been documenting his production while in prison.

Salome Garcia had the opportunity to interview the artist days before he was imprisoned, regarding his recently destroyed series of paintings Caramelos sin saliva, with the intention to document the process of their conception and how the artist envisioned possible ways to rescue these artworks. 

Although most of these conversations have been published in different media, this is the first time they will be presented together with a focus on conservation.
Speakers
avatar for Anamely Ramos Gonzalez

Anamely Ramos Gonzalez

Visiting Researcher, University of Illinois
Anamely Ramos González (Camagüey, Cuba, 1985) holds a degree in Art History from the Universidad de La Habana (2007) and a Master's in Cuban Cultural Processes from the Universidad de las Artes (2014). She is currently pursuing a Ph.D. in Social Anthropology at the Universidad Iberoamericana... Read More →
avatar for Salomé García Bacallao

Salomé García Bacallao

Conservator, RLA Conservation
Salome Garcia (Havana, Cuba, 1991) pursued an M.A. in Conservation and Restoration of Cultural Heritage from the Polytechnic University of Valencia, with an Erasmus Semester at the Nova University of Lisbon, and a focus on modern and contemporary art. She received her bachelor’s... Read More →
Authors
avatar for Anamely Ramos Gonzalez

Anamely Ramos Gonzalez

Visiting Researcher, University of Illinois
Anamely Ramos González (Camagüey, Cuba, 1985) holds a degree in Art History from the Universidad de La Habana (2007) and a Master's in Cuban Cultural Processes from the Universidad de las Artes (2014). She is currently pursuing a Ph.D. in Social Anthropology at the Universidad Iberoamericana... Read More →
avatar for Salomé García Bacallao

Salomé García Bacallao

Conservator, RLA Conservation
Salome Garcia (Havana, Cuba, 1991) pursued an M.A. in Conservation and Restoration of Cultural Heritage from the Polytechnic University of Valencia, with an Erasmus Semester at the Nova University of Lisbon, and a focus on modern and contemporary art. She received her bachelor’s... Read More →
Thursday May 29, 2025 5:00pm - 5:30pm CDT
Hyatt Regency Minneapolis

5:00pm CDT

(Electronic Media) More Than Meets the Eye: New Methods for Testing Artwork Iterations
Thursday May 29, 2025 5:00pm - 5:30pm CDT
In this presentation, Emma Dickson and Cass Fino-Radin explore the critical role of interdisciplinary collaboration in advancing the field of time-based media art conservation. Aligning with the conference theme "What's Your Story: The Power of Collaborations," we argue that the most innovative and effective conservation practices emerge when we blur traditional role boundaries, deconstruct established hierarchies within our field, and facilitate opportunities to exchange practical skills between practitioners.

Through years of cross-disciplinary collaboration on the treatment and migration of complex and interactive time-based media artworks, we have developed and refined new methods for assessing treatments, expanding beyond traditional visual inspection and the limits of human perception. These new methods—which are reproducible and quite accessible—will be shared by illustrating their application to two specific works of art: Tall Ships (1992) by Gary Hill and Ten Thousand Cents (2008) by Aaron Koblin and Takashi Kawashima.

These case studies will illustrate the specific tactics and methodologies used to apply two new universal principles for assessing time-based media works that have emerged from our collaboration:

1. Automation of interactivity for consistent artwork testing

2. Measurable and time-synchronized comparison of iterations

As the field of time-based media conservation continues to mature, integrating these principles into practice is essential for maintaining the integrity of time-based media artworks through successive conservation treatments. By providing conservators with replicable, objective means of assessment, these techniques help minimize unintended alterations that would otherwise inevitably accumulate over time.

The development of these new methods demonstrates how interdisciplinarity when extended beyond collaboration into individual experience and training that bridges into one's collaborator's field, can enhance conservation practice and yield the kind of innovation our specialization needs to steward the art of today and tomorrow.
Speakers
avatar for Cass Fino-Radin

Cass Fino-Radin

Founder, Small Data Industries
Cass Fino-Radin is an art conservator and founder of Small Data Industries, a lab and consultancy that partners with museums, artists, and collectors to address the unique challenges of time-based media art. Before founding Small Data in 2017, Cass served as Associate Media Conservator... Read More →
avatar for Emma Dickson

Emma Dickson

Computer Scientist (Contractor), Antimodular Research
Emma Dickson is an electronic art jack of all trades who has worked in the preservation of time-based media since 2015. As a freelance contractor, they have worked for the Solomon R. Guggenheim Museum, the Tate Modern Museum, The Cooper Hewitt, Smithsonian Design Museum, Small Data... Read More →
Authors
avatar for Cass Fino-Radin

Cass Fino-Radin

Founder, Small Data Industries
Cass Fino-Radin is an art conservator and founder of Small Data Industries, a lab and consultancy that partners with museums, artists, and collectors to address the unique challenges of time-based media art. Before founding Small Data in 2017, Cass served as Associate Media Conservator... Read More →
avatar for Emma Dickson

Emma Dickson

Computer Scientist (Contractor), Antimodular Research
Emma Dickson is an electronic art jack of all trades who has worked in the preservation of time-based media since 2015. As a freelance contractor, they have worked for the Solomon R. Guggenheim Museum, the Tate Modern Museum, The Cooper Hewitt, Smithsonian Design Museum, Small Data... Read More →
Thursday May 29, 2025 5:00pm - 5:30pm CDT
Hyatt Regency Minneapolis

5:00pm CDT

(Objects) Bulked B-72 Fills
Thursday May 29, 2025 5:00pm - 5:30pm CDT
Bulked B-72 fills are a popular choice for conservators working with objects made of stone, ceramics, and plaster. Depending on the concentration of resin, choice of bulking agent, and working methods, bulked B-72 fills provide versatility of purpose that can range from structural to aesthetic. However, many conservators struggle with the material. This practical talk will cover long-refined methods for making the adhesive resin, provide suggestions for bulking materials, and show how to mix, knead, lay the material into the loss, and shape the fills. Making fills for dark stones as well as translucent marble will be illustrated with the use of detailed videos.
Speakers
avatar for Carolyn Riccardelli

Carolyn Riccardelli

Conservator, Objects Conservation, The Metropolitan Museum of Art
Carolyn Riccardelli is a conservator in the Department of Objects Conservation at The Metropolitan Museum of Art where she is responsible for structural issues related to large-scale objects. From 2005-2014 her primary project was Tullio Lombardo’s Adam for which she was the principal... Read More →
Authors
avatar for Carolyn Riccardelli

Carolyn Riccardelli

Conservator, Objects Conservation, The Metropolitan Museum of Art
Carolyn Riccardelli is a conservator in the Department of Objects Conservation at The Metropolitan Museum of Art where she is responsible for structural issues related to large-scale objects. From 2005-2014 her primary project was Tullio Lombardo’s Adam for which she was the principal... Read More →
Thursday May 29, 2025 5:00pm - 5:30pm CDT
Hyatt Regency Minneapolis

5:00pm CDT

(Photographic Materials) De “mist”ifying the Dahlia Sprayer
Thursday May 29, 2025 5:00pm - 5:30pm CDT
For decades the Dahlia Sprayer has become one of the most used pieces of equipment in the paper conservation lab.  The Dahlia Sprayer is a trusted tool for treatment work, such as washing, humidifying, and other applications.  Being constructed from chrome plated brass, the sprayer is also known for its durability and reliability.  A conservator may run thousands of gallons of liquid through a heavily used Dahlia Sprayer over the course of the sprayer’s life.  But as ubiquitous as the Dahlia Sprayer is in our work, it also has drawbacks and problems.  After years of consistent use,  this expensive sprayer can stop working or fail to operate at optimal performance.  This can happen for many reasons, from hard water buildup to degraded O-rings, resulting in leaking, poor misting, or malfunctioning.  Fortunately, many of these issues can be addressed and aren’t difficult to fix.  Parts are easily available, and maintenance isn’t complicated.  This short tip talk will discuss the most common maintenance challenges with the Dahlia Sprayer, how to prevent these issues from happening and how to repair the Dahlia Sprayer when they do occur.
Speakers
avatar for Seth Irwin

Seth Irwin

Conservator, Seth Irwin Paper Conservation
Seth Irwin is the Conservator for the Indiana State Library in Indianapolis. A position he has held since 2019. He also has a private practice that he has had since 2010. Seth holds a Master’s in Art Conservation, specializing in paper conservation, from Queen’s University. He... Read More →
Authors
avatar for Seth Irwin

Seth Irwin

Conservator, Seth Irwin Paper Conservation
Seth Irwin is the Conservator for the Indiana State Library in Indianapolis. A position he has held since 2019. He also has a private practice that he has had since 2010. Seth holds a Master’s in Art Conservation, specializing in paper conservation, from Queen’s University. He... Read More →
Thursday May 29, 2025 5:00pm - 5:30pm CDT
Hyatt Regency Minneapolis

5:00pm CDT

(Preventive Care) Other duties as assigned: the unexpected tasks of preventive care and the lessons of a pre-program Preservation Assistant
Thursday May 29, 2025 5:00pm - 5:30pm CDT
Preventive conservation, often heralded as the cornerstone of collection care, encompasses a broad range of tasks critical to preserving cultural heritage. However, the responsibilities of those in preventive roles, particularly early-career professionals, extend far beyond routine tasks of monitoring temperature and humidity or designing storage solutions. These "other duties as assigned" are often not quantifiable but offer invaluable learning experiences that shape a conservation professional’s critical thinking, adaptability, and problem-solving skills. This abstract explores the unspoken and often overlooked side tasks encountered during my experience as a pre-program Preservation Assistant at the University of Arizona Libraries Special Collections.

Working in preventive conservation means consistently encountering unexpected challenges that require rapid learning, creativity, and a strong collaborative mindset. These tasks range from adjusting last-minute exhibition installations to emergently responding to a leak, each providing hands-on training in the essential skills of a preservation professional. Though seemingly peripheral, these tasks often become learning moments that reinforce core conservation principles.

One example is the creation of customized archival enclosures for materials with irregular dimensions and with high use in instruction settings. While this may seem like a routine technical skill, it becomes a nuanced problem-solving exercise requiring a balance between preservation needs, accessibility, and the available resources of the institution. Similarly, my involvement in exhibition preparation—installing, deinstalling, and fabricating mounts—taught me the value of adaptability. Decisions about object placement and long-term protection needed to be made in real-time, often with limited flexibility and strict deadlines. These experiences honed my ability to make informed decisions quickly, a crucial skill for any conservator.

Beyond practical skills, this work fostered collaboration with various departments, from curators and archivists to facilities staff, strengthening my communication abilities. Preventive conservation often demands interdisciplinary cooperation and consultation with those less familiar with preservation, and understanding how to effectively convey the needs of collection care to those outside the field proved vital. These instances also introduced the opportunity for me to develop creative methods of communication, such as an internal ‘Bug Bulletin’ for integrated pest management and a standardized quarterly report for climate data. The insights gained from these collaborative efforts are lessons that have implications far beyond my role as a Preservation Assistant, contributing to my broader understanding of conservation workflows and decision-making processes.

In this presentation, I will reflect on how these unquantifiable side tasks contribute to a deeper understanding of the complexities of preventive care. By sharing examples of these experiences, I aim to highlight the often-unacknowledged but critical role that "other duties as assigned" play in shaping the development of emerging professionals in conservation. Ultimately, these tasks, though small in scope, have had a profound impact on my ability to think critically, adapt swiftly, and collaborate effectively—skills that are essential in a successful conservation career.
Speakers
avatar for Elise Etrheim

Elise Etrheim

Preservation Assistant, University of Arizona Libraries Special Collections
Elise Etrheim holds a Bachelor of Science in Chemistry with a minor in Art History from Emory University, where she first discovered her interest in art conservation and preservation. During her undergraduate studies, she completed an internship at the Michael C. Carlos Museum and... Read More →
Authors
avatar for Elise Etrheim

Elise Etrheim

Preservation Assistant, University of Arizona Libraries Special Collections
Elise Etrheim holds a Bachelor of Science in Chemistry with a minor in Art History from Emory University, where she first discovered her interest in art conservation and preservation. During her undergraduate studies, she completed an internship at the Michael C. Carlos Museum and... Read More →
Thursday May 29, 2025 5:00pm - 5:30pm CDT
Hyatt Regency Minneapolis

5:00pm CDT

(Research & Technical Studies) Developments in Safer Solvent Selections for the Removal and Application of Synthetic Resins
Thursday May 29, 2025 5:00pm - 5:30pm CDT
A unique partnership comprising focal points from academia, chemical industry, non-profit, and private practice was carefully curated with specific expertise, capabilities, and priorities to advance safer solvent identification and education for cultural heritage use. The work highlighted within is a continuation of the “Safer Solvent Selections for the Removal and Application of Synthetic Resins” paper presented at the 2024 RATS Specialty Session of the annual AIC meeting.  The work justification and vision is unchanged from last year: conservators seek solvents for the application and removal of polymeric resins that a) are no/low-odor, b) have minimal health and environmental impacts and c) achieve the necessary solvation and film properties.

Previous work identified solvent blends that met rigorous GHS-defined safety criteria and demonstrated ranges of solvency for Laropal A81, PARALOID™ B72, and PARALOID™ B44. This presentation will provide the next stage of research with advanced solvent blend considerations, characterization of polymeric films properties casts from select blends, and Greener Solvents project partner feedback on test evaluations.  A dialogue with the AIC community is critical to bring this research into practice over time. We look forward to productive discussion that moves the field towards safer solvent alternatives that work.
Speakers
avatar for Melinda Keefe

Melinda Keefe

Senior R&D Manager, Dow
Melinda Keefe is a R&D Director at Dow. She is responsible for a global team and capabilities that enable Formulation & Materials Science based technical solutions for Dow businesses and customers in Plastic Packaging, Industrial Intermediates, Consumer Solutions and Coating markets... Read More →
Authors
avatar for Melinda Keefe

Melinda Keefe

Senior R&D Manager, Dow
Melinda Keefe is a R&D Director at Dow. She is responsible for a global team and capabilities that enable Formulation & Materials Science based technical solutions for Dow businesses and customers in Plastic Packaging, Industrial Intermediates, Consumer Solutions and Coating markets... Read More →
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Alan Phenix

Paintings Conservator; Scientist, Private Practice
Alan Phenix, now retired, was a paintings conservator, university educator and conservation scientist.
BK

Bethany Karl

Chemical Lab Technologist, Dow
avatar for Gwendoline Fife

Gwendoline Fife

Director, Greener Solvents, Sustainability in Conservation
avatar for Roise Grayburn

Roise Grayburn

Head of the Scientific Research and Analysis Lab, University of Delaware
Rosie Grayburn is the Head of the Scientific Research and Analysis lab at Winterthur Museum, Garden and Library and Affiliated Associate Professor in the Winterthur/University of Delaware in Art Conservation, where she teaches conservation science and analytical methodologies to graduate... Read More →
avatar for Vikram Prasad

Vikram Prasad

Research Scientist, Dow
Thursday May 29, 2025 5:00pm - 5:30pm CDT
Hyatt Regency Minneapolis

5:00pm CDT

(Textiles) Private Practice Panel
Thursday May 29, 2025 5:00pm - 5:30pm CDT
Thursday May 29, 2025 5:00pm - 5:30pm CDT
Hyatt Regency Minneapolis

5:10pm CDT

(Paintings) BEVA Q&A
Thursday May 29, 2025 5:10pm - 5:25pm CDT
Thursday May 29, 2025 5:10pm - 5:25pm CDT
Hyatt Regency Minneapolis

5:30pm CDT

PSG Happy Hour
Thursday May 29, 2025 5:30pm - 6:30pm CDT
Stay after the last talk of the day to mingle with your fellow Paintings group members - enjoy light refreshments and treat yourself to a glass of wine or a mocktail from the cash bar.
Thursday May 29, 2025 5:30pm - 6:30pm CDT
Hyatt Regency Minneapolis

5:45pm CDT

Objects Group - Speed Networking Session
Thursday May 29, 2025 5:45pm - 6:45pm CDT
Want to get to know more of your fellow objects conservators, but sometimes feel at a loss as to where to start? Stay after the Objects Session on May 29 for this new pre-reception event. Held at the meeting hotel Hyatt Regency and offered at no cost - this event will feature speed networking sessions. Note this event does require registration. No food and beverage will be served but the OSG Reception at Brit's Pub follows this event. Walk over to Brit's Pub together with your newly met colleagues and toast the future.   
Thursday May 29, 2025 5:45pm - 6:45pm CDT
Hyatt Regency Minneapolis

6:30pm CDT

Imaging Working Group Happy Hour and Studio Tour
Thursday May 29, 2025 6:30pm - 9:00pm CDT
Calling all Imaging Working Group members and fans - join us for a studio tour at the Minneapolis Institute of Art led by Charles Walbridge. The tour will start at 6:30 pm followed by an informal "pay as you go" happy hour at the museum's cafe - Agra Culture. If needed we might be able to offer a second later tour. The cost is free - attendees will need to provide their own transportation and purchase their own food and drink.

Space is limited in the tour and registration is required. Please add the event to your Annual Meeting registration.
Speakers
avatar for Charles Walbridge

Charles Walbridge

Lead Collections Photographer, Minneapolis Instiute of Art
Charles Walbridge is Lead Collections Photographer at Minneapolis Institute of Art (Mia). He has worked at Mia for more than 15 years and the work he does includes still photography, 3D scanning, conservation photography, image data standards, and museum sustainability.
Thursday May 29, 2025 6:30pm - 9:00pm CDT
Minneapolis Institute of Art 2400 3rd Ave S, Minneapolis, MN 55404

7:00pm CDT

OSG and PCN Group Reception - Cost $45 for OSG Members and $65 for PCN Members
Thursday May 29, 2025 7:00pm - 9:30pm CDT
Join your fellow objects conservators for a fun night and tasty food and drink at Brit's Pub. Enjoy a well-appointed indoor/ outdoor space and enjoy the comradery.

Brit's Pub is a short walk from the meeting location the Hyatt Regency and is handicapped accessible.

Cost is $45 for OSG members and $65 for PCN members

Be sure to attend the Objects Group pre-reception networking session held at the Hyatt Regency from 5:45 - 6:45 pm.
Thursday May 29, 2025 7:00pm - 9:30pm CDT
Brit's Pub 1110 Nicollet Mall, Minneapolis, MN 55403
 

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